The Long Journey of Gracia Mendes
Title
The Long Journey of Gracia Mendes
Price
€ 107,99
ISBN
9786155211232
Format
eBook PDF (Adobe DRM)
Number of pages
169
Language
English
Publication date
Imprint
Also available as
Hardback - € 108,00
Table of Contents
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The Family Tree Acknowledgments Chapter 1 Introducing the Family Chapter 2 A Short History of the Conversos Inquisition in Spain and Portugal New Attitudes Toward Conversos The Special Status of the Rich Changing Places – Changing Names Chapter 3 Life in Sixteenth-Century Antwerp Converso Life in Lisbon and Antwerp The Family Business Pepper and the Mendes Wealth The Move to Antwerp Gracia’s Official Entry into the Family Business Diogo is Accused of Judaizing The Emperor’s Blackmail The Emperor’s Matchmaking Chapter 4 Gracia in Venice Conditions in Ferrara and Mantua A Sisters’ Quarrel The Alleged Kidnapping Inquisition by Proxy Costa’s Defense Brianda Before the Inquisition Chapter 5 Gracia and Jewish Patronage in Sixteenth-Century Ferrara The Ferrara Bible Meeting an Old Friend The Medal Controversy The Growing Intolerance in Ferrara Chapter 6 In Business with Ragusa Jews in Ragusa The Ragusan Deal Chapter 7 The Ottoman Empire and the Jews The Legal Status of the Jews Social life and Customs The Western View of Levantine Jews Gracia’s Arrival in the Ottoman Empire Who is a Jew? The Mendes-Nasi Enterprise The Crises in Ancona and Pesaro Leading the Boycott Against Ancona New Faces in Constantinople Gracia and the Resettling of Safed Jewish Patronage in the Ottoman Empire The Decline of the House of Mendes-Nasi Conclusion Appendix: Money, Prices, Values Index List of Illustrations Bibliography

Marianna D. Birnbaum (ed.)

The Long Journey of Gracia Mendes

The historical biography of a true Jewish heroine in her day, Gracia Mendes. Born in 1510 in Portugal, the book details this woman's extraordinary personality until her death in 1569 in Constantinople (today's Istanbul). Her life exemplified a perseverance by the Jewish culture to survive and triumph even in the worst of conditions. As a young girl, Gracia secretly married successful Jewish spice trader, Francisco Mendes. But at age 27 she became a widow, yet she went on to raise her children and run the family business all on her own. Her travels led her through Antwerp, Venice, Ferrara, Ragusa, and finally to Constantinople, from where the Ottoman Empire dominated former Byzantium territories and offered shelter for battered Conversos (converted Jews). The text recounting the last fifteen years of Gracia's life at the center of the Empire is particularly revealing. Birnbaum's biography has the unique distinction of being the first among many studies to pay tribute to a woman during this period. It is also one of the first titles to pay equal attention to the lives of the Conversos in Christian West Europe and in the Muslim East.
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Editor

Marianna D. Birnbaum

Marianna D. Birnbaum is Research Professor in the Department of Germanic Languages at UCLA. She is also involved in the Medieval Studies Department’s programs at the Central European University, Budapest.