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Hebrews of the Portuguese Nation : Conversos and Community in Early Modern Amsterdam

Part of the The modern Jewish experience series
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In the 17th century, descendants of forcibly baptised Jews (conversos) fled the Iberian Inquisitions to settle in Amsterdam, a city renowned for its commercial ties and religious tolerance.

On arrival the conversos lacked clear ethnic or religious identities and had little social organisation.

Yet, they formed the nucleus of what became within a generation a strongly cohesive community with a highly structured and well-developed sense of its Jewish identity.

Drawing on family and communal records, diaries, memoirs, literary works, and other sources, Miriam Bodian reconstructs the fascinating story of how these Portuguese immigrant-merchants, professionals, and intellectuals, for the most part-reasserted their Judaism, while maintaining their Iberian heritage.

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Product Details
Indiana University Press
0253332923 / 9780253332929
Hardback
02/04/1998
United States
240 pages, 8 b&w photos
156 x 235 mm, 630 grams
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