Popes and Jews, 1095-1291

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194 Popes and Jews, 1095–1291


the bishop of Cordova he expressed grave concern that in the provinces of Cordova


and Baeza, Jews frequently not only wore no visible sign to distinguish them from


Christians but even pretended to be Christians in order to deceive people.205


Hence refusal to wear distinguishing grab might be taken as a sign of mockery.


Yet if controlling Christian treatment of Jews was part of a much wider attempt by


popes to regulate and supervise Jewish communities without directly intervening


in their religious observances, the most obvious example of the papacy attempting


to exert authority over Jewish communities in Europe concerned the alleged blas-


phemy and heresy to be found in the Talmud.


THE P APACY AnD THE TAlMuD


The history of papal involvement in the burning of the Talmud is long and com-


plex.206 The Talmud was a Jewish work made up of two components, the Mishnah,


a written compendium of rabbinic Judaism’s ‘oral Torah’ and the Gemara, an


exposition of the Mishnah and related writings. Peter Alfonsi, originally a Spanish


Jew named Moses of Huesca, who converted in 1106 and took his new name fol-


lowing the town’s conquest by Peter I of Aragon in 1097, accurately observed that


the sayings of the Sages—otherwise known as the ‘oral Torah’—as distinct from


the writings of the Prophets or ‘Written Torah’, was the foundation of medieval


Judaism.207 Yet how much did Christians really know about the Talmud in the


High Middle Ages?


Peter Alfonsi—like Peter the venerable—assumed that reason was the criterion


against which Christian and Jewish religious views were ultimately to be assessed.208


Hence for Peter the venerable the Jews and their Talmud were alike in their utter


lack of reason: a reflection of the Jews’ inhumanity.209 We have seen in Chapter


Four how, in a letter to louis vII of France about the Second Crusade, Peter, like


Bernard of Clairvaux, insisted that Jews should in no way be harmed since this was


prohibited by Scripture. Yet at the same time he identified them as enemies, both


historically and contemporaneously, of Christ and Christianity. So although he


believed that they should be spared physical violence, he also thought that they


must contribute resources to the crusading venture.210 Indeed he regarded Jews as


worse than Muslims because, whereas Muslims accepted a degree of Christian the-


ology, Jews rejected it totally. Furthermore, he believed that Jews expressed their


disagreement actively by continually deriding and blaspheming Christianity, even


claiming that they frequently bought stolen goods to give themselves the oppor-


tunity to abuse Christian sacred objects 211


205 Gregory IX, ‘Significantibus dilectis filiis’, Grayzel, Vol. 1, p.244; Simonsohn, pp.174–5.
206 Simonsohn, The Apostolic See and the Jews. History, pp.300–7.
207 The Trial of the Talmud: Paris, 1240. Hebrew Texts translated by John Friedman, Latin Texts trans-
lated by Jean Connell Hoff; Historical Essay by Robert Chazan (Toronto, 2012), p.8; pp.9–10.
208 The Trial of the Talmud: Paris 1240, ed. Chazan, p.12.
209 The Trial of the Talmud: Paris 1240, ed. Chazan, p.13.
210 The Trial of the Talmud: Paris 1240, ed. Chazan, pp.14–15.
211 The Trial of the Talmud: Paris 1240, ed. Chazan, p.15.

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