Chronology: Anti-Semitism and Persecution of Jews
From Ancient times
3rd cent. B.C.E. | Manetho, Greco-Egyptian historian, says Jews were expelled from Egypt as lepers. | |
38 B.C.E. | Anti-Jewish riots in Alexandria (Egypt): many Jews were killed, and all the Jews were confined to one quarter of the city. | |
19 C.E. | Emperor Tiberius expels the Jews from Rome and Italy. | |
66 | Massacre of the Jews of Alexandria (Egypt) in which 50,000 were killed. | |
1st cent. C.E. | Apion of Alexandria surpasses other Hellenistic anti-Semites in the crudeness of his fabrications. | |
200 | Tertullian, Church Father, writes his anti-Jewish polemic in Latin Adversus Judaeos. | |
325 | After the ecumenical council of Nicaea, the Christian Church formulates its policy toward the Jews: the Jews must continue to exist for the sake of Christianity in seclusion and humiliation. | |
386-387 | John Chrysostom, Church Father in the East, violently anti-Jewish, delivers eight sermons in Antioch. | |
438 | Theodosius II, Roman emperor of the East, legalizes the civil inferiority of the Jews. | |
468 | Persecutions of the Jews in Persia (Babylonia). | |
c. 470 | Jews persecuted in Persia (Babylonia) by Firuz, the exilarch, and many Jews killed and their children given to Mazdeans. | |
535-553 | Emperor Justinian I issues his novellae to Corpus Juris Civilis expressing his anti-Jewish policy. | |
612 | Visigothic king Sisebut of Spain inaugurates a policy of forcible conversion of all Jews in the kingdom. | |
624-628 | Jewish tribes of Hejaz (Arabia) destroyed by Muhammad. | |
628 | Dagobert I expels Jews from Frankish kingdom. | |
632 | Heraclius, Byzantine emperor, decrees forced baptism of all Jews in the Byzantine empire. | |
632 | Official Church doctrine on conversion of Jews in Spain formulated. | |
638 | Visigothic king Chintila compels the sixth council of Toledo to adopt resolution proclaiming that only Catholics may reside in the kingdom of Spain. Jews are expelled. | |
694-711 | All Jews under Visigothic rule in Spain declared slaves, their possessions confiscated and the Jewish religion outlawed. | |
717-20 | Caliph Omar II introduces series of discriminatory regulations against the dhimmi, the protected Christians and Jews, among them the wearing of a special garb. | |
1009-13 | Fatimid caliph Al-Hakim in Eretz Israel issues severe restrictions against Jews. | |
1012 | Emperor Henry II of Germany expels Jews from Mainz, the beginning of persecutions against Jews in Germany. | |
1096-99 | First Crusades. Crusaders massacre the Jews of the Rhineland (1096). | |
1144 | Blood libel at Norwich (England); first record, blood libel - Martyrdom of St. William of Norwich related in the Anglo-Saxon chronicle. | |
1146 | Anti-Jewish riots in Rhineland by the Crusaders of the second Crusades. | |
1147 | Beginning of the brutal persecution of the Jews of North Africa under the Almohads, lasted until 1212. | |
1182 | King Philip Augustus of France decrees the expulsion of the Jews from his kingdom and the confiscation of their real estate. | |
1190 | Anti-Jewish riots in England: massacre at York, and other cities. | |
1215 | Fourth Lateran Council introduces the Jewish Badge. | |
1235 | Blood libel at Fulda, Germany. | |
1236 | Severe anti-Jewish persecutions in western France. | |
1240 | Disputation of Paris which led to the burning of the Talmud. | |
1242 | Burning of the Talmud at Paris. | |
1255 | Blood libel at Lincoln, England. | |
1263 | Disputation of Barcelona. | |
1290 | Expulsion of the Jews from England, the first of the great general expulsions of the Middle Ages. | |
1298-99 | Rindfleisch Massacres -Massacre of thousands of Jews in 146 localities in southern and central Germany led by the German knight Rindfleisch. | |
1306 | Expulsion of Jews from France. | |
1306-20 | Pastoureaux ("Shepherds"), participants of the second Crusade in France against the Muslims in Spain, attack the Jews of 120 localities in southwest France. | |
1321 | Persecutions against Jews in central France in consequence of a false charge of their supposed collusion with the lepers. | |
1321-22 | Expulsion from the kingdom of France. | |
1336-39 | Persecutions against Jews in Franconia and Alsace led by lawless German bands, theArmleder. | |
1348-50 | Black Death Massacres which spread throughout Spain, France, Germany and Austria, as a result of accusations that the Jews had caused the death of Christians by poisoning the wells and other water sources. | |
1389 | Massacre of the Prague (Bohemia) community. | |
1391 | Wave of massacres and conversions in Spain and Balearic Islands. | |
1394 | Expulsion from the kingdom of France. | |
1399 | Blood libel in Poznan. | |
1411-12 | Oppressive legislation against Jews in Spain as an outcome of the preaching of the Dominican friar Vicente Ferrer. | |
1413-14 | Disputation of Tortosa (Spain). The most important and longest of the Christian-Jewish disputations the consequence of which was mass conversions and intensified persecutions. | |
1421 | Persecutions of Jews in Vienna and its environs, confiscation of their possessions, and conversion of Jewish children, 270 Jews burnt at stake, known as the Wiener Gesera(Vienna Edict). Expulsion of Jews from Austria. | |
1435 | Massacre and conversion of the Jews of Majorca. | |
1438 | Establishment of mellahs (ghettos) in Morocco. | |
1452-3 | John of Capistrano, Italian Franciscan friar, incites persecutions and expulsions of Jews from cities in Germany. | |
1473 | Marranos (Marranos are converted Jews who supposedly maintained their Judaism in secret - the word is a disparaging term) of Valladolid and Cordoba, in Spain massacred. | |
1474 | Marranos of Segovia, Spain, massacred. | |
1480 | Inquisition established in Spain. | |
1483 | Torquemada appointed inquisitor general of Spanish Inquisition. Expulsion of Jews from Warsaw. | |
1490-91 | Blood libel in La Guardia, town in Spain, where the alleged victim (Christopher of Toledo) became revered as a saint. | |
1492 | Expulsion from Spain. | |
1492-93 | Expulsion from Sicily. | |
1495 | Expulsion from Lithuania. | |
1496-97 | Expulsion from Portugal: mass forced conversion. | |
1506 | Lisbon Massacre - Massacre of Marranos in Lisbon. | |
1510 | Expulsion of Jews from Brandenburg (Germany). | |
1516 | Venice initiates the ghetto, the first in Christian Europe. | |
1531 | Inquisition established in Portugal. | |
1535 | Jews of Tunisia expelled and massacred. | |
1541 | Expulsion from the kingdom of Naples. Expulsion from Prague and crown cities. | |
1544 | Martin Luther, German religious reformer, attacks the Jews with extreme virulence. | |
1550 | Expulsion from Genoa (Italy). | |
1551 | Expulsion from Bavaria. | |
1553 | Burning of the Talmud in Rome. | |
1554 | Censorship of Hebrew books introduced in Italy. | |
1555 | Bull Cum Nimis Absurdum established the ghetto in Rome | |
1556 | Burning of Marranos at Ancona, Italy. | |
1567 | Expulsion from the republic of Genoa (Italy). | |
1569, 1593 | Expulsion from the Papal States (Italy). | |
1614 | Vincent Fettmilch, anti-Jewish guild leader in Frankfort, Germany, and his followers attack the Jews of Frankfurt and forces them to leave the City. | |
1624 | Ghetto established at Ferrara (Italy). | |
1648-49 | Massacres initiated by Bogdan Chmielnicki, leader of the Cossacks, and peasant uprising against Polish rule in the Ukraine, in which 100,000 Jews were killed and 300 communities destroyed. | |
1650 | Jews of Tunisia confined to special quarters (Hדra). | |
1655-56 | Massacres of Jews during the wars of Poland against Sweden and Russia. | |
1670 | Expulsion from Vienna: Blood libel at Metz (France). | |
1711 | Johann Andreas Eisenmenger writes his Entdecktes Judenthum ("Judaism Unmasked"), a work denouncing Judaism and which had a formative influence on modern anti-Semitic polemics. | |
1712 | Blood libel in Sandomierz (Poland) after which the Jews of the town were expelled. | |
1715 | Pope Pius VI issues a severe "Edict concerning the Jews," in which he renews all former restrictions against them. | |
1734-36 | Haidamacks, paramilitary bands in Polish Ukraine, attack Jews. | |
1745 | Expulsion from Prague. | |
1768 | Haidamacks massacre the Jews of Uman (Poland) together with Jews from other places who had sought refuge there. | |
1788 | Haidamacks massacre the Jews of Uman (Poland): 20,000 Jews and Poles killed. | |
1790-92 | Destruction of most of the Jewish communities of Morocco. | |
1791 | Pale of Settlements-twenty-five provinces of Czarist Russia established, where Jews permitted permanent residence: Jews forbidden to settle elsewhere in Russia. | |
1805 | Massacre of Jews in Algeria. | |
1819 | A series of anti-Jewish riots in Germany that spread to several neighboring countries (Denmark, Poland, Latvia and Bohemia) known as Hep_Hep Riots, from the derogatory rallying cry against the Jews in Germany. (HEP = 'Hierosolymos Est Perdita' - Jerusalem is lost, apparently first used in the Middle Ages in riots associated with the crusades.) | |
1827 | Compulsory military service for the Jews of Russia: Jewish minors under 18 years of age, known as "Cantonists," placed in preparatory military training establishments. | |
1835 | Oppressive constitution for the Jews in Russia issued by Czar Nicholas 1. | |
1840 | Blood libel in Damascus (The Damascus Affair). Blood libel in Rhodes | |
1853 | Blood libel in Saratov (Russia), bringing a renewal of the blood libel throughout Russia. | |
1858 | Abduction of a 7-year-old Jewish child, Edgard Mortara, in Bologna by Catholic conversionists (Mortara Case), an episode which aroused universal indignation in liberal circles. | |
1878 | Adolf Stoecker, German anti-Semitic preacher and politician, founds the Social Workers' Party, which marks the beginning of the political anti-Semitic movement in Germany. | |
1879 | Heinrich von Treitschke, German historian and politician, justifies the anti-Semitic campaigns in Germany, bringing anti-Semitism into learned circles. | |
1879 | Wilhelm Marr, German agitator, coins the term anti-Semitism. | |
1881-84 | Pogroms sweep southern Russia, beginning of mass Jewish emigration. | |
1882 | Blood libel in Tiszaeszlar, Hungary, which aroused public opinion throughout Europe. | |
1882 | First International Anti-Jewish Congress convened at Dresden, Germany. | |
1882 | A series of "temporary laws" confirmed by Czar Alexander III of Russia in May, 1882 ("May Laws"), which adopted a systematic policy of discrimination, with the object of removing the Jews from their economic and public positions. | |
1885 | Expulsion of about 10,000 Russian Jews, refugees of 1881-1884 pogroms, from Germany. | |
1891 | Blood libel in Xanten, Germany. | |
1891 | Expulsion from Moscow, Russia. | |
1893 | Karl Lueger establishes in Vienna the anti-Semitic Christian Social Party and becomes mayor in 1897. | |
1894 | Dreyfus Affair - Alfred Dreyfus trial in Paris.. | |
1895 | Alexander C. Cuza organizes the Alliance Anti-semitique Universelle in Bucharest, Rumania. | |
1899 | Houston Stewart Chamberlain, racist and anti-Semitic author, publishes his Die Grundlagen des 19 Jahrhunderts which became a basis of National-Socialist ideology. | |
1899 | Blood libel in Bohemia (the Hilsner case). | |
1903 | Kishinev Pogrom | |
1905 | Russian Pogroms - 1905 - Pogroms in the Ukraine and Bessarabia, perpetrated in 64 towns (most serious in Odessa with over 300 dead and thousands wounded). | |
1905 | First Russian public edition of the Protocols of the Elders of Zion appears. | |
1906 | Pogroms In Bialystok and Siedlce, Russia. | |
1909-10 | Polish boycott against Jews. | |
1911-13 | Menahem Mendel Beilis, blood libel trial at Kiev. | |
1912 | Pogroms in Fez (Morocco). | |
1915 | Ku Klux Klan, racist organization in the U.S., refounded. | |
1917-21 | Russian Civil War Pogroms - Pogroms in the Ukraine and Poland. 1) Pogroms by retreating Red Army from the Ukraine (spring, 1918), before the German army. 2) Pogroms by the retreating Ukraine army under the command of Simon Petlyura,. 3)Pogroms by the counter revolutionary "White Army" under the command of General A.I. Denikin (fall, 1919) 4) Pogroms by the "White Army" in Siberia and Mongolia (1919). 5) Pogroms by anti-Soviet bands in the Ukraine (1920-21). 6) Pogroms in Poland including Galicia and Warsaw. Some 50,000- 200,000 Jews in all are killed in this period. | |
1919 | Abolition of community organization and non-Communist Jewish institutions in Soviet Russia. | |
1919 | Pogroms in Hungary: c. 3,000 Jews killed. | |
1920 | Adolf Hitler becomes Fuehrer, of the National-Sozialistische Deutsche Arbeiterpartei (NSDAP), (NAZIs) | |
1920 | Henry Ford I begins a series of anti-Semitic articles based on the Protocols of the Elders of Zion, in his Dearbon Independent. | |
1924 | Economic restrictions on Jews in Poland. | |
1925-27 | Adolf Hitier's Mein Kampf appears. | |
1933 | Adolf Hitler appointed chancellor of Germany. Anti-Jewish economic boycott: first concentration camps (Dachau, Oranienburg, Esterwegen and Sachsenburg). | |
1935 | Nuremberg Laws introduced. | |
1937 | Anti-Semitic legislation in Rumania. | |
1937 | Discrimination against Jews in Polish universities. | |
1938 | After Anschluss, pogroms in Vienna, anti-Jewish legislation introduced: deportations to camps in Austria and Germany. | |
1938 | Charles E. Coughlin, Roman Catholic priest, starts anti-Semitic weekly radio broadcasts in U.S. | |
1938 | July 6-16, Evian Conference on Jewish refugees at Evian les Bains verifies that the world has shut its doors against Jewish refugees. | |
1938 | Kristallnacht Nazi anti-Jewish outrage in Germany and Austria (Nov. 9-10, 1938): Jewish businesses attacked, synagogues burnt, Jews sent to concentration camps. | |
1938 | Racial legislation introduced in Italy (Nov. 17, 1938). Anti Jewish economic legislation in Hungary. | |
1939 | Anti-Jewish laws introduced in the Protectorate (Czechoslovakia). | |
1939 | Outbreak of World War 11 (Sept. 1, 1939), Poland overrun by German army: pogroms in Poland; beginning of the Holocaust. | |
1940 | Nazi Germany introduces gassing. | |
1940 | Formation of ghettos in Poland: mass shootings of Jews: Auschwitz camp, later an extermination camp, established; Western European Jews under Nazis. Belzec extermination camp established. | |
1940 | Algerian administration applies social laws of Vichy. | |
1941 | Germany invades Russia and the Baltic states. Majdanek extermination camp established. Chelmno and Treblinka extermination camps established. Anti-Jewish laws in Slovakia.Pogroms in Jassy (Iasi), Rumania. Pogroms and massacres by the Einsatzgruppen and native population in Baltic states and the part of Russia occupied by Germany. Expulsions of Jews from the German Reich to Poland. Beginning of deportation and murder of Jews in France. | |
1941 | Farhud - Pogrom against Jews in Iraq in consequence of Rashid Ali al-Jilani's coup d'יtat. Nazi Germany introduces gassing in extermination camps .Babi Yar massacre. | |
1942 | Wannsee Conference - Conference in Wannsee, Berlin, to carry out the "Final Solution" (Jan. 20, 1942). Beginning of mass transports of Jews of Belgium and Holland to Auschwitz. Massacres in occupied Russia continue. Death camps of Auschwitz, Majdanek and Treblinka begin to function at full capacity: transports from ghettos to death camps. Sobibor extermination camp established. | |
1943 | Germany declared Judenrein. Transports of Jews from all over Europe to death camps.Warsaw Ghetto Uprising and final liquidation of the Warsaw ghetto (May 16, 1943). Annihilation of most of the ghettos. Transport of Italian Jews to death camps. | |
1944 | Extermination of Hungarian Jewry. | |
1945 | Germany surrenders (May 8, 1945) estimated Jewish victims in the Holocaust 5,820,960. | |
1946 | Pogromsat Kielce , Poland, 42 Jews murdered and many wounded (July 4, 1946). | |
1948 | Jewish culture in U.S.S.R. suppressed and Jewish intellectuals shot. | |
1948 | Pogroms in Libya and elsewhere in the Arab world. | |
1952 | Prague Trials (Slonsk): Murder of Yiddish intellectuals in Russia and many Jews disappear or sent to work camps. | |
1953 | Accusation of "Doctors' plot" in the U.S.S.R., cancelled with Stalin's death. | |
1954-6 | Jews of Egypt expelled. | |
1961 | Mustapha Tlass, Defense Minister of Syria, publishes a history of the Damascus blood libelwhich claims that Jews actually do murder Christian children. | |
1967 | Arabic version of the Protocols of the Elders of Zion published in Egypt. | |
1968 | Fresh wave of anti-Semitism in Poland; emigration of most of the remaining Jews of Poland. | |
1969 | Jews executed in Iraq. | |
1970 | Leningrad, and other trials of Soviet Jews, who agitate for right to emigrate. | |
2005 | Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, President of Iran, claims that the Holocaust was a myth or exaggerated, vows to achieve a "world without Zionism and Israel." |
No comments:
Post a Comment