LEADER 06101oam 22005172 450 001 9910367616803321 005 20240424230516.0 010 $a90-04-39248-3 024 7 $a10.1163/9789004392489 035 $a(CKB)4970000000170168 035 $a(nllekb)BRILL9789004392489 035 $a(oapen)https://directory.doabooks.org/handle/20.500.12854/32020 035 $a(EXLCZ)994970000000170168 100 $a20210425h20192019 uy 0 101 0 $aeng 135 $aurun####uuuua 181 $ctxt$2rdacontent 182 $cn$2rdamedia 183 $anc$2rdacarrier 200 00$aReligious changes and cultural transformations in the early modern western Sephardic communities$fedited by Yosef Kaplan 210 $cBrill$d2019 210 1$aLeiden ;$aBoston :$cBrill,$d[2019] 210 4$d©2019. 215 $a1 online resource 225 0 $aStudies in Jewish history and culture 300 $a"The twenty-four articles in this volume are based on lectures given at the conference that took place at the Hebrew University in Jerusalem from November 14 through 16, 2016"--Preface. 311 $a90-04-36753-5 320 $aIncludes bibliographical references and index. 327 $tFront Matter --$tCopyright page --$tPreface /$rYosef Kaplan --$tAcknowledgments --$tFigures and Tables --$tNotes on Contributors --$tMarkers of Converso Identities --$tA Crisis of Judeoconverso Identity and Its Echoes, 1391 to the Present /$rDavid Graizbord --$tA Family of the Nação from the Atlantic to the Mediterranean and Beyond (1497-1640) /$rJames Nelson Novoa --$tConversos versus Recusants: Shaping the Markers of Difference (1570-1680) /$rNatalia Muchnik --$tRichelieu in Marrano Garb: Conversos as Agents of the French Confessional Model, c. 1640 /$rClaude B. Stuczynski --$tSemi-Clandestine Judaism in Early Modern France: European Horizons and Local Varieties of a Domestic Devotion /$rCarsten L. Wilke --$tPrison Revelations and Jailhouse Encounters: Inquisitorial Prisons as Places of Judaizing Activism and Cross-Cultural Exchange /$rRonnie Perelis --$tMechanisms of Social Discipline in the Sephardic Communities --$tDefining Deviance, Negotiating Norms: Raphael Meldola in Livorno, Pisa, and Bayonne /$rBernard Dov Cooperman --$tA Sephardic Saga in the Dutch Republic: The Cohen Pallache Women on Love, Religion, and Social Standing /$rTirtsah Levie Bernfeld --$tDispute Resolution and Kahal Kadosh Talmud Torah: Community Forum and Legal Acculturation in Eighteenth-Century Amsterdam /$rEvelyne Oliel-Grausz --$tThe "Livro de Pleitos": The Leadership of the Spanish and Portuguese Community of London in the Eighteenth Century as a Court of Requests /$rAlex Kerner --$tEconomy and Community among Italian Sephardim --$tJews in the Papal States between Western Sephardic Diasporas and Ghettoization: A Trial in Ancona as a Case Study (1555-1563) /$rSerena Di Nepi --$tThe Sephardic Community and Social Practices in the Circuit of Money: Social Implications of Payment Networks in the Context of the Livorninas /$rMauricio Dimant --$tCharity Begins at Home: Reflections on the Dowry Society of Livorno /$rNourit Melcer-Padon --$tThe Boundaries of Rabbinical Authority --$tJacob Sasportas and Problems of Discipline in the Ets Haim Yeshiva /$rYaacob Dweck --$tA Letter's Importance: The Spelling of Daka(h) (Deut. 23:2) and the Broadening of Western Sephardic Rabbinic Culture /$rDavid Sclar --$tHakham Yaakov Athias-A Portuguese Rabbi Facing the Winds of Enlightenment and Secularization /$rYocheved Beeri --$tVarieties of Cultural Creativity --$tOn the Role of Hebrew Grammars in the Western European Diaspora and the New World /$rMoisés Orfali --$tNew Jews in Amsterdam: Some Social Aspects Reflected in the Thesouro dos Dinim by Menasseh ben Israel /$rAliza Moreno-Goldschmidt --$tPenso de la Vega and the Question of Jewish Baroque /$rEinat Davidi --$tCrossing the Atlantic-Sephardic Communities in the New World --$tSea Is History, Sea Is Witness: The Creation of a Prosopographical Database for the Sephardic Atlantic /$rMichael Studemund-Halévy --$tRevisiting Blackness, Slavery, and Jewishness in the Early Modern Sephardic Atlantic /$rJonathan Schorsch --$tFeckless Fathers, Fraught Families: Abandonment and Cultural Change in the Early Modern Jewish World /$rJessica Vance Roitman --$tThe Gabay Dynasty: Plantation Jews of the Colonial Atlantic World /$rStanley Mirvis --$tPatriots at the Periphery: David Nassy, the French Revolution, and the Emancipation of the Dutch Jews /$rSina Rauschenbach --$tBack Matter --$tIndex of Names and Places. 330 $aFrom the sixteenth century on, hundreds of Portuguese New Christians began to flow to Venice and Livorno in Italy, and to Amsterdam and Hamburg in northwest Europe. In those cities and later in London, Bordeaux, and Bayonne as well, Iberian conversos established their own Jewish communities, openly adhering to Judaism. Despite the features these communities shared with other confessional groups in exile, what set them apart was very significant. In contrast to other European confessional communities, whose religious affiliation was uninterrupted, the Western Sephardic Jews came to Judaism after a separation of generations from the religion of their ancestors. In this edited volume, several experts in the field detail the religious and cultural changes that occurred in the Early Modern Western Sephardic communities. 410 0$aStudies in Jewish History and Culture$v54. 606 $aJews$zEurope, Western$xHistory$vCongresses 606 $aSephardim$zEurope, Western$xHistory$vCongresses 607 $aEurope, Western$xEthnic relations$vCongresses 610 $aJudaism 615 0$aJews$xHistory 615 0$aSephardim$xHistory 676 $a305.892/40409031 700 $aKaplan$b Yosef$4edt$01662578 702 $aKaplan$b Yosef$f1944-, 801 0$bNL-LeKB 801 1$bNL-LeKB 906 $aBOOK 912 $a9910367616803321 996 $aReligious changes and cultural transformations in the early modern western Sephardic communities$94154527 997 $aUNINA