TY - CHAP
T1 - Kol Iśra’el ‘Arevim Zeh la-Zeh (“All Israel Are Mutually Responsible”)
T2 - Self-Government, Economy, and the Rise of New Diasporic Centers: THE JEWS OF THE ITALIAN PENINSULA
AU - Roitman, Jessica Vance
PY - 2024
Y1 - 2024
N2 - The chapter delves into Jewish communal life, including the dynamics of settlement and resettlement, self-government and self-help, commerce and cultural exchange. Serena di Nepi explores life in the Ghettos of the Italian Peninsula. She shows that ghettoized Jews stood at the center of international networks as a mobile and adaptable cohort despite the hardships of Ghettoization. Jews adapted to those hardships by creating unique instruments and modalities of intra-communal administration that ameliorated the flow of Jewish refugees to Italy; allowed Jews to operate as merchant consortia, and to defend Jewish culture against conversionist pressure. Jessica Roitman focuses on the creation of new Jewish centers in Europe and the New World under the impact of mercantilist policies and attendant concepts of religious tolerance. Roitman pays attention to the Western Sefardim as a network of tradesmen who straddled and transcended the Catholic-Protestant divide. She shows that the roles of these subjects were founded on unstable rights of settlement and commerce that permitted Jewish culture to exist in far-flung places in relative peace. Those places were arenas of intense imperial competition, and thus exposed the Jewish grantees to political and social perils in addition to economic opportunities.
AB - The chapter delves into Jewish communal life, including the dynamics of settlement and resettlement, self-government and self-help, commerce and cultural exchange. Serena di Nepi explores life in the Ghettos of the Italian Peninsula. She shows that ghettoized Jews stood at the center of international networks as a mobile and adaptable cohort despite the hardships of Ghettoization. Jews adapted to those hardships by creating unique instruments and modalities of intra-communal administration that ameliorated the flow of Jewish refugees to Italy; allowed Jews to operate as merchant consortia, and to defend Jewish culture against conversionist pressure. Jessica Roitman focuses on the creation of new Jewish centers in Europe and the New World under the impact of mercantilist policies and attendant concepts of religious tolerance. Roitman pays attention to the Western Sefardim as a network of tradesmen who straddled and transcended the Catholic-Protestant divide. She shows that the roles of these subjects were founded on unstable rights of settlement and commerce that permitted Jewish culture to exist in far-flung places in relative peace. Those places were arenas of intense imperial competition, and thus exposed the Jewish grantees to political and social perils in addition to economic opportunities.
KW - Early modern Jewish history
KW - Early modern history
KW - Jewish Colonial History
KW - Jewish history
KW - Diaspora Religion
KW - Diaspora
KW - diaspora politics
UR - https://www.routledge.com/Early-Modern-Jewish-Civilization-Unity-and-Diversity-in-a-Diasporic-Society-An-Introduction/Graizbord/p/book/9780367767235
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85208208970
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85208208970#tab=citedBy
U2 - 10.4324/9781003168270-6
DO - 10.4324/9781003168270-6
M3 - Chapter
SN - 9780367767235
SN - 9780367767211
T3 - Early Modern Themes
SP - 224
EP - 244
BT - Early Modern Jewish Civilization
A2 - Graizbord, David
PB - Routledge Taylor & Francis Group
CY - London and New York
ER -