Popes and Jews, 1095-1291

(Frankie) #1

viii Preface


predicament of Jews within christian society through analysis of a wide range of


contemporary Hebrew and Latin documents. i break new ground by exploring not


only papal responses to Jews but also the other side of the story: Jewish ideas about


individual popes and the papacy as an institution.


There are good reasons for writing this book now. in recent years medieval


christian–Jewish relations have proved a fruitful area of academic research, and


both undergraduate and postgraduate courses in this field are very popular. at the


University of Reading i currently teach a third-year special subject Deviance and


Discipline: Church and Outcasts in the Central Middle Ages which examines the


medieval church’s attitude towards minorities in western christian society during


the High Middle ages, in particular its treatment of social outcasts such as lepers,


homosexuals, and prostitutes, and the status it afforded to a range of diverse reli-


gious groups including heretics, pagans, Muslims—and also Jews. indeed some of


my most important sources derive from material i regularly teach my students and


i thank them for their insights which have doubtless furthered this study.


Yet when discussing the relationship between the medieval papacy and Judaism


i often find that students understand little of how and why medieval popes made


pronouncements about Jews, and even less about what these Jews thought of indi-


vidual popes and the papacy. i soon came to realize that although much important


work had been done on papal ideas about Jews, the converse—Jewish ideas about


the papacy, itself a highly nuanced and complex research area deserving rigorous


and wide-ranging investigation—remained a surprisingly under-developed topic.


indeed, no recent academic book has focused specifically on both papal attitudes


towards Jews and Jewish attitudes about the papacy during the eleventh, twelfth, and


thirteenth centuries. Thus my aim is not merely to complement previous scholar-


ship, but to develop a substantially distinctive approach through a reappraisal of


the evidence. The study of religious history and of the papacy itself has never been


so popular at both a scholarly and non-specialist level, and both in my own univer-


sity and elsewhere, colleagues have encouraged me to believe that there is an urgent


need for such a study in english.


in analysing the development of papal pronouncements both protecting and


restricting Jews, manifested on the one hand by condemnation of crusader vio-


lence and the blood libel charge, and on the other by restrictions on Jewish rights


and calls for the talmud to be burnt as blasphemous and as heretical even within


Judaism, i develop a number of themes. The first is an examination of a range of


contemporary Hebrew sources in order to explore perceptions of popes and the


institution of the papacy through the eyes of rabbis and other leaders of Jewish


communities. The second is an analysis of individual papal pronouncements in the


light of political ideas and doctrinal beliefs with a view to ascertaining the signifi-


cance of such pronouncements at a time of a growing depiction of Jews in polem-


ical literature as enemies of christian society. This demands particular emphasis on


the language and rhetoric of papal correspondence and the influence of classical


and patristic texts on the formation, development, and direction of papal letters—


which in turn leads to my third theme: an appraisal of the relationship between


papal directives, canon law, and conciliar legislation, all of which increasingly

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