St. Dominic's Church, Lisbon
facing Rossio Square
Portugal’s King Manuel I came to the throne in 1495 and set about establishing himself as one of the great patrons of the Portuguese Renaissance. However things changed when Manuel begged to marry King Ferdinand’s daughter. The Spanish monarch would approve, providing Portugal expelled its Jews! In Dec 1496, Manuel promptly complied. He decreed that all Jews must convert to Catholicism or leave the country, in order to placate his future in-laws, Spain’s Catholic Monarchs.
King Manuel issued two decrees:
A] in 1496, edict of expulsion from Portugal (when the lucky Jews escaped to Amsterdam, Germany, Italy, France, Morocco, Constantinople, Brasil and Peru) and
B] in 1497, the forced conversion edict. The 1497 Edict blocked Portuguese Jews from emigrating and were they too were forcibly converted to Christianity. The Portuguese Jews who’d been forcibly baptised in the 1497 mass conversion were called New Christians or Conversos.
In the early 1500s, drought and plague swept through Portugal, food prices inevitably soared and the Church accused the Jewish merchants. Because Easter and Passover overlapped, the Jews who were preparing Passover foods “caused” the deadly plague and drought.
During the worst of the drought in Ap 1506, the Dominican Convent attracted large crowds who were praying for relief. A light that seemed to be emanating from a crucifix over the chapel altar was described as a divine sign. One New Christian asked “How can a piece of wood work wonders?” The crowd was enraged, calling his remark blasphemous, and beat him to death. His body was dismembered and burned in the square in front of the Convent. His protective brother was similarly killed.
Contemporary image of the massacres by fire in Lisbon
Citizens followed the fanatical churchmen through the city streets and soon murdered every New Christian they could find. Their bodies were dragged to the main Rossio Square and burnt in huge bonfires in front of the Dominican church. Not even infants survived the slaughter.
The next day, sailors from foreign merchant ships joined the locals in the pogroms, presumably for the purpose of robbery and not because they were angry about true Christianity.
During the massacre, royals, courtiers and aristocrats left town, if they could. The Lisbon massacre had signalled a failure of King Manuel’s policy of integration. Most of the New Christians, converted to Catholicism against their will, had remained Jewish in their homes and souls.
Upon King Manuel's return to Lisbon, he arrested the two Dominicans who had led the riot and had them executed, along with 40-50 other conspirators. He then gave consent to all New Christians to leave Portugal, countermanding his 1497 order that forbade Conversos from emigrating.
The next day, sailors from foreign merchant ships joined the locals in the pogroms, presumably for the purpose of robbery and not because they were angry about true Christianity.
During the massacre, royals, courtiers and aristocrats left town, if they could. The Lisbon massacre had signalled a failure of King Manuel’s policy of integration. Most of the New Christians, converted to Catholicism against their will, had remained Jewish in their homes and souls.
Upon King Manuel's return to Lisbon, he arrested the two Dominicans who had led the riot and had them executed, along with 40-50 other conspirators. He then gave consent to all New Christians to leave Portugal, countermanding his 1497 order that forbade Conversos from emigrating.
Ending the madness, King Manuel gave New Christians a grace period of 30 years, without persecution, to cease all Jewish practices or emigrate. King Manuel also abolished legal discrimination against them. After that, the lives and the property of the Conversos who stayed in Lisbon were never endangered, at least until after his death in 1521. Then the persecutions resumed.
There were 3 main contemporary sources about the pogrom:
1. The massacre sent shockwaves throughout Europe and accounts of it appeared in Portuguese, Jewish, Spanish and German documents. An anonymous German, who had been present in Lisbon and witnessed the tragedy, wrote a vivid account that was printed in several German editions: The Massacre of the New Christians of Lisbon, 1506.
2 The Spanish chroniclers Andrés Bernáldez and Alonso de Santa Cruz both devoted a chapter in their works to the 1506 crisis.
3 The New Christian Isaac Ibn Faradj was present in Lisbon during the massacre. He survived and later escaped from Portugal to Ottoman Salonica where he reverted to Judaism. He wrote: ‘It happened on a Christian holiday. It was while the King and the Queen were absent from Lisbon on account of the plague which raged there at that time, that a priest with a cross stood up. Wicked men with him, murderers and scoundrels, they killed more than 1,400 New Christians, and burned their bodies, men and women, pregnant women and children. They burnt them in the streets of the city for three days on end, till the bodies were consumed and became ashes. I stole from the fire one half of the burned head of a dear friend of mine, and I hid it, kept it, brought it to Valona, and buried it in a Jewish cemetery. When King Manuel heard of the great wrong done to the Jews he came to Lisbon, and the priest was burnt at the stake and forty murderers hanged”.
A memorial stone was placed in Rossio Square in 2006,
the exact site where the Jewish bodies were thrown onto bonfires.
A memorial to the victims of the Lisbon Massacre was sponsored by the Jewish community of Portugal, and erected in 2006, the 500th anniversary. A round travertine stone was bisected and a bronze Star of David was shaped into the flat surface. Translated it read: “In memory of the thousands of Jews who were victimised by intolerance and religious fanaticism, killed in the massacre that started on 19th April 1506, in this Square”. And the base had a Biblical verse.
Modern visitors to this memorial need to reflect about the death and destruction caused by intolerance. Or perhaps read Paulo Mendes Pinto & Susana Bastos Mateus’ book The Massacre of the Jews in Lisbon, 2014. Thank you to Lisbon LPS for the photos.
Modern visitors to this memorial need to reflect about the death and destruction caused by intolerance. Or perhaps read Paulo Mendes Pinto & Susana Bastos Mateus’ book The Massacre of the Jews in Lisbon, 2014. Thank you to Lisbon LPS for the photos.
Thanks to Netanyahu, many people now have a negative attitude towards Israel.
ReplyDeleteIt took a very long time to erect a memorial to those poor souls.
ReplyDeleteHello Hels, I don't know how I missed this post. It showed up in my new posts for today, even though it is dated October 1, but even then it was underneath some other posts I have already seen.
ReplyDelete.
The story of Manuel I carries a important lesson that when one does something wrong for personal gain, it only spawns more evil and wrongdoing, and the original miscreant, in this case Manuel I, ends up in a tangle of evil and regret. At least Manuel did show some remorse, but that was only at the cost of the thousands of lives he destroyed, and all that blood remained on his hands.
--Jim
Hello Hels, I don't know how I missed this post. It showed up in my new posts for today, even though it is dated October 1, but even then it was underneath some other posts I have already seen.
ReplyDelete.
The story of Manuel I carries a important lesson that when one does something wrong for personal gain, it only spawns more evil and wrongdoing, and the original miscreant, in this case Manuel I, ends up in a tangle of evil and regret. At least Manuel did show some remorse, but that was only at the cost of the thousands of lives he destroyed, and all that blood remained on his hands.
--Jim
What an absolutely shocking thing to happen. The title persecuted can truly be applied to the Jews of Europe, and its been happening for such a long time.
ReplyDelete