ונציה,
עיר
באיטליה
הצפונית, על
חוף הים
האדריאטי.
גרעינה
ההסטורי של
העיר נמצא
בלב
הלאגונה
הונטית,
במרחק של 4 ק"מ
מן היבשה
ובמרחק של 2 ק"מ
מן הים. האי
מאלאמוקו
המוארך
מפריד בין
העיר ובין
הים. הוא
סוגר את
הלאגונה
בדרום-מזרח,
ומצפונו
נמצא המעבר
העיקרי בין
הלאגונה
ובין הים
האדריאטי.
במעבר זה,
שהועמק
והורחב
בשנות ה30,
יכולות גם
ספינות-אוקיינוס
גדולות
להיכנס
ללאגונה
ולהגיע
לנמל ונציה.
היום
שייכים
לתחום
העירוני של
ונציה גם
המרכזים
מסטרה
ומארגרה
שביבשה מול
ונציה
ההסטורית
ונציה
ההסטורית
שוכנת על
גבי 118 איים
קטנים,
שביניהם
מפרידים 160
מייצרים או
תעלות.
התעלה
הגדולה
והחשובה
ביותר היא "התעלה
הגדולה"
וחוצה את
העיר לכל
רחבה. זהו
עורק
התחבורה
הגדול
ביותר של
העיר, ההומה
מתנועת
סירות
נוסעים
ומשא. בין
האי ג'ודקה
ובין שאר
חלקי העיר
מפרידה
תעלה רחבה
ועמוקה
שדרכה
יכולות
ספינות ים
להגיע אל
מיתקני
הנמל שבקצה
המערבי של
העיר
רוחבן
של התעלות
הקטנות
אינו עולה
על 4-5 מ',
ועומקן
המועט אינו
מאפשר אלא
מעבר סירות
קטנות,
גונדולות,
שהן סירות
משוטים
צרות
ושטוחות
האפנייות
לתחבורה
בתוך ונציה
בצידי
הבתים,
הבנויים על
יסודות אבן (לפנים
עמדו הבתים
על
כלונסאות),
מתפתלות
מדרכות
צרות,
הנמשכות
בהקבלה
לתעלות.
רציפים
קטנים
מאפשרים את
העלייה על
הסירות. את
התעלות
חוצים כ400
גשרים, רובם
דמויי-קשת
ובעלי
מדרגות. סבך
הסימטות
המפותלות
והצרות,
שרחבן
לפעמים
מספיק רק
למעבר שני
אנשים
באיים, אינו
מאפשר
תנועת כלי
רכב. אולם
אפשר להגיע
ברגל לכל אי
הפעילות
הכלכלית של
העיר
מתרכזת
מסביב לשני
הנמלים:
הנמל
המסחרי
הישן והנמל
התעשייתי
של מארגרה.
ונציה היא
השלישית
בערי הנמל
של איטליה
להיקף
התנועה,
אחרי ג'נובה
ונאפולי.
ליד המזחים
קם איזור
תעשייה, ובו
בתי זיקוק
לנפט
ומפעלים
מטאלורגיים
וכימיים. כן
נמצאים
בונציה בתי
חרושת
לטכסטיל
ולמזונות,
בתי דפוס
והוצאות
ספרים
ותמונות.
האי מוראנו
שבצפון
ונציה
מפורסם עוד
מימי
הבינייםכמרכז
אומנות
הזכוכית.
כאן מפיקים
זכוכיות
אמנותיות
ואבני
פסיפס
צבעוניים
לציפוי
ולקישוט.
השיטות
המסורתיות
של אומנות
זו נידחו
היום מפני
תהליכי
עיבוד
ממוכנים.
בוראנו אי
קטן בקצה
הצפוני של
הלאגונה,
הוא מרכז
למלאכת יד
אמנותית,
בייחוד
לעבודות
רקמה. על האי
מאלאמוקו
שוכן
הלידות
מרכז הרחצה,
הנופש
והשעשועים
ממוסדות
התרבות של
ונציה:
ספריית סאן-מארקו,
גינזך
הרפובליקה
הונצייאנית
ובו
מליונים
רבים של
תעודות,
המכון למדע,
ספרות
ואמנות,
אקדמיית
האמנות, בתי
ספר גבוהים
לאדריכלות,
למלאכת
מחשבת
ולמסחר,
המכון
לספנות
ועוד
ונציה
היא אחד
ממרכזי
התיירות
הבין-לאומית.
הפלא של עיר
האיים,
שרחובותיה
הם תעלות-ים,
מיבניה
ההיסטוריים
ואוצרות
האמנות שבה,
וכן הלידו
שלה מושכים
המוני
תיירים מכל
חלקי העולם
בכל ימות
השנה,
ובייחוד
בעונת
הרחצה
והחופשה.
בונציה
נערכים
כינוסים,
תערוכות,
פסטיבלים
לאמנויות
השונות
בעלי שם
עולמי.
בתיירות
קשורות,
מלבד
מיפעלי
ההארחה
והשעשועים,
מלאכות
מחשבת
שונות:
צורפות,
אמנות
הזכוכית,
הכנת מעשי
עור, אריג
ורקמה
על ראשית
התיישבות
היהודים
בונציה לא
ידוע מאומה,
למרות
שברור שהיא
קדומה מאוד.
כבר ב955 הוצא
בונציה צו-גירוש
נגד יהודים,
וכן נאסר על
ספינות
ונציאניות
להוביל
יהודים
וסחורות של
יהודים.
אולם במאה ה12
התחילו
סוחרים
יהודים
לשוב ולבקר
בעיר, ומהם
התיישבו אל
אחד מאייה,
שנקרא ג'ודקה.
יהודים
הגיעו
לונציה הן
מקושטא מן
המזרח, הן
מגרמניה
מצפון
וממערב.
קהילה
קבועה
רשמית
הוקמה במאה
ה14 על סמך
רשיון
מיוחד, "קונדוטה",
מטעם
השלטונות,
שחייב את
היהודים,
בין השאר,
לקיים בעיר
שלושה
בנקים
להלוואות
לטובת
העניים. ב1366
הוזמנו לשם
כך בנקאים
יהודים
אחרים
להתיישב
בונציה.
במאה ה15 סבלו
יהודי
ונציה
רדיפות מצד
השלטונות
וההמון. ב1434
הוטלה
עליהם
נשיאת אות-הקלון,
וב1480 נשרפו
בונציה
שלושה
יהודים
בעקבות
עלילת דם
קבוצות
אחדות מבין
גולי-ספרד
הגיעו
לונציה,
ביניהם דון
יצחק
אברבנאל,
שחי בזקנתו
בונציה
ונפטר בה.
באותה
תקופה
נקלטו
בונציה גם
יהודים
מערי
איטליה
הצפונית,
שנפגעו ע"י
המלחמות
בין
הצרפתים
והספרדים. ב1516
סגרו
השלטונות
את היהודים
בתוך רובע-מגורים
מיוחד, הגטו.
אח"כ הורשו
גם סוחרים
יהודים מן
המזרח, כן
אנוסים
פליטי-פורטוגל
להצטרף
אליהם.
היהודים
העשירים
לקחו חלק רב
בסחר עם
המזרח, וכן
פעלו
כמלווי-כספים
וכסוחרי
אבנים
טובות.
העניים היו
ברובם
רוכלים.
קהילת
ונציה היתה
לראשונה
בקהילות
איטליה
בעשרה
ולשנייה
בגדלה, אחרי
רומא. היא
מנתה במאה ה17
כ4,800 נפש
כבר ב1516
נוסד
בונציה ע"י
הנוצרי
בומברג, בית
דפוס עברי,
שהיה בשמשך 100
שנה ומעלה
מרכז
למלאכת
הדפוס
העברית. גטו
ונציה, שבו
עמדו שבעה
בתי כנסת
לפי
המנהגים
השונים, ובו
ישבו במאות
ה16-17 כמה אישים
דגולים כמו:
יהודה אריה
דה מודנה,
שמחה
לוצאטו,
יצחק
קרדוזו,
אליהו
מונטלטו,
דוד נייטו,
ועוד, היה
זמן רב אחד
המרכזים
החשובים של
חיי היהדות
באירופה.
אמנם
השלטונות
שמרו בכל
תוקף על
חוקי ההסגר
בגטו ועל
ההגבלות
שהותנו ב"קונדוטה",
אבל עם זה
הגנו על
תושבי הגטו
מפני גזרות
ושמדות
שהיו
נהוגים
במקומות
אחרים
במאה ה18
חלה הרעה
במצבם
הכלכלי של
יהודי
ונציה. ב1735
פשטה
הקהילה את
הרגל, אולם
חזרה
לאיתנה
כעבור זמן
מה. בעקבות
הכיבוש
בידי צבא
צרפת
המהפכנית ב1797
נפרצו
חומות הגטו,
ובהנהלה
הדמוקראטית
הראשונה
בונציה
שותפו גם
יהודים.
כשנמסרה
ונציה
לאוסטריה ב1798
אבדו
ליהודים
זכויותיהם.
הן הוחזרו
להם במסגרת
ממלכת
איטליה ב1806-1814,
ושוב בימי
מהפכת 1848/9,
כשבראש
השלטון
הרפובליקני
בעיר עמד
היהודי
למחצה
דניאל
מאנין. בין
תומכי
המהפכה היו
יהודים
רבים,
ובכללם
רבני
הקהילה.
יהודי
ונציה זכו
סופית
לשיווי
זכויות עם
העברת
ונציה
מרשות
אוסטריה
לרשות
איטליה
המאוחדת
החדשה ב1866.
אולם
בינתיים
נצטמקה
ונידלדלה
הקהילה,
ואיבדה גם
את חשיבות
התרבותית
לפני
מלחמת
העולם
השנייה
ישבו
בונציה כ2000
יהודים.
הקהילה
סבלה קשה
בימי
הכיבוש
הגרמני ב1943-1945.
יהודים
רבים מתוכה,
ובכללם הרב
אדולפו
אוטולנגי,
נשלחו
למחנות
הריכוז
וההשמדה
מקור:
אנציקלופדיה
עברית כרך ט"ז,
עמודים 415-116, 427-428
The Scuola
Tedesca, the oldest synagogue, built between 1528-1529, has been
renovated many times since then. But like the Scuola
Canton and the Scuola
Italiana, it is used only for special events. Instead, the Scuola
Spagnola and the Scuola
Levantine are the only two operational synagogues, with the Spagnola
being used in the summer because it is the largest, and the Levantine
in the winter because it is the only synagogue with heating.
Jewish
Community Main Office:
Cannaregio 2899
Phone: 39- 041- 715012
E-mail: com.ebra.ve@libero.it Office of the Chief Rabbi: Ghetto Vecchio - Cannaregio1189
Phone: 39 - 041 - 715118 Chief Rabbi: Rabbi Ghili Binyamin Chief Rabbi of Venice President: Paolo Gnignati Vice President: Giuseppe Salvadori Board of the Community:
Gaia Ravā, Paolo Pescara, Sandro Romanelli, Mario Salvadori, Corrado
Calimani. Jewish Museum:
Phone: 39-041-715359
Fax: 39-041-723007
E-mail: museoebraico@codesscultura.it
Open every day except Saturday and Jewish Holidays, December 25, January 1,
May 1. From October 1-May 31 (10:00-16:30). From June 1-September 30 (10:00
-19:00). Guided tour of the Synagogues (every half hour beginning at 10:30) Old Cemetary: (Lido of Venice) Guided tours from October 1 - May 31
(Sunday 14:30 by reservation only).From June 1st till September 30 (Sunday
and Wednesday 14:30; Friday 10:30) except Saturday and Jewish Holidays,
December 25, January 1, May 1. Adei-Wizo:
Phone: 39-041-5287036 Library:
Phone: 39-041-718833 CGE (Jewish Young People Centre):
Phone: 39-041-716556 KH (Keren Hayesod):
Phone 39-041-5266249 KKL: (Keren Kayemeth Leisrael)
Phone: 39-041-720679 Rest Home (Kosher meals and products by request):
Phone: 39-041-716002 Mikveh:
Tally R. Elhyani-Bassali
, Mikvah Lady
Mobile: +39 34 9219 9797
Supervision: Rabbi Ghili Binyamin Chief Rabbi of Venice Mikveh
info updated on June 25, 2012
By: Tally R. Elhyani-Bassali
tallyeb@gmail.com Please update us!
Italian city; formerly capital of a republic embracing northeastern Italy
and some islands in the Mediterranean. The first Venetian document, so far
as known, in which Jews are mentioned is a decree of the Senate, dated 945,
prohibiting captains of ships sailing in Oriental waters from taking on
board Jews or other merchantsa protectionist measure which was hardly
ever enforced. According to a census of the city said to have been taken in
1152 (Galliccioli, "Memoria Antiche Venete," ii. 279), the Jews
then in Venice numbered 1,300, an estimate
which Galliccioli himself believes to be excessive. An event which must have
increased the number of Jews in Venice was the
conquest of Constantinople by the allied Venetians and French in 1204, when
the former took possession of several islands in the Levant, including Euba,
where the Jews were numerous. At that time Jewish merchants went to
Venice for the transaction of business, and some of them settled
there permanently.
The first lasting settlement of Jews was not in the city itself, but on the
neighboring island of Spinalunga, which was called "Giudeca" in a
document dated 1252. For some unknown reason this island was afterward
abandoned. For several centuries the ruins of two ancient synagogues were to
be seen there (comp. Ravā in "Educatore Israelitā," 1871, p.
47). At the beginning of the thirteenth century many Jews went to
Venice from Germany, some seeking refuge from persecution, others
attracted by the commercial advantages of this important seaport. A decree
of the Senate, dated 1290, imposed upon the Jews of
Venice a duty of 5 per cent on both imports and exports (Galliccioli,
l.c. ii. 280). R. Simeon Luzzatto (1580-1663) speaks in his
noteworthy "Discorso Circa il Stato degli Hebrei di Venetia" (p.
18) of the Jew who was instrumental in bringing the commerce of the Levant
to Venice.
An ordinance of 1541, issued by the Senate on the advice of the Board of
Commerce, to provide Jewish merchants with storehouses within the precincts
of the ghetto, observes that "the greater part of the commerce coming
from Upper and Lower Rumania is controlled by itinerant Jewish Levantine
merchants" (Schiavi, "Gli Ebrei in Venezia e nelle Sue Colonie,"
p. 493). When the "Cattaveri" were commissioned in 1688 to compile
new laws for the Jews, the Senate demanded that "the utmost
encouragement possible should be given to those nations [referring to the
various sections into which the whole Jewish community was divided] for the
sake of the important advantages which will thus accrue to our customs
duties" (comp. Ravā, l.c. 1871, p. 334).
Besides engaging in commerce, the Jews conducted loan-banks; and in the
ancient decrees of the Senate in regard to them it is repeatedly declared
that the operation of these banks, which was prohibited by the canonical
law, was the chief reason for admitting Jews into
Venice. Therefore, in deference to some remnant of scruple, it was
ordained, at least at first, that contracts relative to these transactions
should not be drawn up in the city itself, but in the neighboring Mestre (Galliccioli,
l.c. ii. 281). The interest on the loans was at first fixed by a
decree of 1366 at 4 per cent, but it was raised afterward to 10 or 12 per
cent, according to whether the loans were made on substantial security or on
written obligations. The original object of these banks was solely to help
the poor, but it soon became evident that it was necessary to provide for
greater loans, some of which were made to the government itself. These
banks, as well as Jewish affairs in general, were placed under the
surveillance of special magistrates whose titles varied according to the
times, as "consoli," "sopraconsoli," "provveditori,"
"sopraprovveditori," etc. (see Soave in "Corriere Israelitico,"
1879, p. 56). (see
image)
The Ghetto, Venice.
(From a photograph.) (see
image)
Plan of Venice in
1640.
Star Shows Position of the Ghetto
.
(From
Martin
Zeiler
, "Itineraria Italiæ
.")
Despite all this, however, the right of the Jews to reside in
Venice always remained precarious. Their legal position was not
regulated by law, but was determined, as in the case of other foreign
colonies, by "condotte" (safe-conducts) granted for terms of
years, and the renewal of which was sometimes refused (Lattes, in "Venezia
e le Sue Lagune," vol. i., p. ii., Appendix, p. 177). The Jews, indeed,
were twice expelled and compelled to retire to Mestre.
The first "condotta" for the Jews seems to have been issued in
1373; as a rule the duration of the condotte ranged between five and ten
years. At one of the renewals, made in 1385, an annual tax of 4,000 ducats
was imposed on them, but in compensation they were relieved from all other
taxes except customs duties. In 1394 the Senate, alleging that the Jews had
not observed the legal regulations in their loan transactions, and that if
these continued all the movable property in Venice
would pass into their hands, ordained that at the expiration of the current
permit, in 1396, they should leave the city. When that date arrived they
actually retired to Mestre (Galliccioli, l.c. ii. 282); but in the
course of the same year, in view of the damage which resulted from their
absence, the Senate recalled them (Ravā, l.c. 1871, p. 48). They
were, however, not permitted to remain in Venice
more than fifteen days at a time, and were obliged to wear on their breasts
a distinguishing sign in the form of a round piece of yellow cloth, for
which a yellow cap was later substituted, and still later a red cap. This
odious regulation, although the degree of its observance varied at different
times, and exceptions to it were permitted, continued in force for about two
centuries, until advancing civilization did away with it; Galliccioli,
writing at the end of the seventeenth century, says that in his day all such
distinctions had ceased.
The restriction to fifteen days' residence does not seem to have been
enforced long; being an isolated measure, it soon came to be disregarded. A
decree of the year 1423 forbade all Jews of Venice
to hold real estate ("pro Dei reverentia et pro utilitate et commodo
locorum"; Galliccioli, l.c. ii. 291). Other repressive measures
followed in 1434. The order to wear the badge, then little observed, was
enforced with severity. Schools for games, singing, dancing, and other
accomplishments ("di qualsiasi dottrina") were prohibited, and all
association with Christian women was still more sternly forbidden (Ravā, l.c.
1871, p. 48). The practise of any of the higher professions was also
forbidden, excepting that of mediicine, which, notwithstanding various bulls
prohibiting the treatment of Christians by Jews (Galliccioli, l.c.
ii. 290), was always followed by the latter with credit. Other prohibitions
followed; and in 1566 tailoring was specially included among the forbidden
trades, "in order that Christian artisans may not be injured." For
the same reason internal commerce was prohibited to the Jews, with the
exception of the so-called "strazzaria," the trade in cast-off
clothes (Ravā, l.c. 1871, p. 174).
It is noteworthy that despite all these restrictions the economic condition
of the Jews in Venice was on the whole
prosperous, which proves that in general the laws were by no means enforced
to the letter. In 1386 Corfu submitted to Venice,
and one of the embassy charged with arranging the terms of the surrender was
a Jew, who obtained for his coreligionists on the island privileges which
were always faithfully observed; the Jews in their turn always gave proofs
of their sincere devotion to the republic, winning from the commanders of
the Venetian troops high praise for their valor in the frequent wars against
the Turks (Schiavi, l.c. p. 487).
In the second half of the fifteenth century the Jews of the entire republic
were menaced by the clerical agitation against Jewish money-lenders (see
Jew. Encyc.
vii. 4, s.v.
Italy; x. 88, s.v.
Pledges); and some cities of the mainland, terrorized by this agitation,
requested permission of the Senate to expel the Jews. Cardinal Bessarione,
when questioned on this subject by the Senate, replied that they might be
tolerated "if the proper caution were observed," and the request
was accordingly denied. Nevertheless a few cities persisted in their demands
for the banishment of the Jews; and in the course of a few years some
expulsions took place, as at Brescia (1463), Vicenza (1476), and Bergamo and
Treviso (1479).
A much more serious fate befell the Jews of Trent when the monk
Bernardinus of Feltre accused them of the murder of a Christian child (1475). Although the
Doge of Venice, Mocenigo, issued a strong
manifesto for the protection of the Jews, he could not prevent a similar
trial for ritual murder from taking place in Venice
itself a few years later, attended by the same atrocious methods of
procedure. There was, however, one noteworthy point of difference: the whole
trial was conducted as if for an individual crime, and the number of the
victims was confined to the accused (Ciscato, "Gli Ebrei in Padova,"
p. 136).
The expulsion of the Jews from Spain (1492) and Portugal (1496) brought many
exiles to Venice, and among them came, after
many peregrinations, the celebrated Isaac Abravanel, who, during his
residence in Venice, had occasion to use his
diplomatic skill in settling certain difficulties between the republic and
the King of Portugal (Grätz, "Gesch." ix. 9).
Times of peril now followed for the republic. In 1508 the famous League of
Cambray was formed against it, in which nearly all the states of Europe,
including Austria, France, Spain, the Papal States, and Naples, united. The
common danger had the effect of relaxing the enforcement of the anti-Jewish
laws and of drawing Jews and Christians together in more friendly relations.
But peace was hardly concluded (1516) when the old policy was revived, and
the better to insure the separation of Jews and Christians the institution
of the ghetto was introduced. Venice thus
became the mother of this institution. The decree which the Senate issued in
regard to it referred to a decree of 1385; and this in turn referred to a
still earlier decree which had not been carried out (Schiavi, l.c. p.
322). According to Galliccioli (l.c. ii. 301), however, all the Jews
could not find homes in the ghetto, and many were obliged to live outside.
Synagogues, formerly scattered throughout the city, were now permitted only
in Mestre, but before long a new concession allowed
them in Venice again, though only in the
ghetto. At the same time, while Venice acquired
the unenviable reputation of having introduced the ghetto, it became a
potent factor in the spiritual life of Judaism through the famous printing
establishment of Daniel
Bomberg, which published the most important works of rabbinical literature. In
the later years of Bomberg's life other presses competed with him, as many
as four existing in Venice at one time.
In 1553, however, the proscription of Hebrew literature by the Inquisition
began, and all copies of the Talmud which could be found in Rome,
Venice, Padua, and other cities were confiscated and burned. Later
the prohibition was somewhat relaxed, though
Leon of Modena, in his "Historia dei Riti Ebraici" (p. 38,
Venice, 1638), declares: "To-day it [the Talmud] remains
prohibited; and in Italy particularly it is neither seen nor read." In
1566 the Senate forbade the printing of Hebrew books; but either the
prohibition affected Jews only or the decree was soon revoked, for Hebrew
printing in Venice continued uninterruptedly or
was resumed after a short interval, and many new works were published.
Although these always appeared under the names of Venetian nobles as
editors, the connection of the latter with such works ended there.
In 1527 another expulsion took place, although it probably affected only the
money-lenders, who withdrew to Mestre, but were permitted to return to
Venice for the time necessary to sell their pledges. In 1534 they
were recalled, and this time the Jews organized themselves into a
corporation called "Universitā." Since each man wished to
preserve his own nationality according to the country from which he came,
the Universitā was divided into three national sections, Levantines,
Germans, and Occidentals, the last name being applied to those who came from
Spain and Portugal. The administration of the whole Universitā was in the
hands of a council of seven members, three chosen from the Levantines, three
from the Germans, and one from the Occidentals. Many laws were passed,
furthermore, to regulate the whole internal administration of the community.
According to Schiavi, an internal tribunal was also established to
adjudicate both civil and criminal suits; but later on the Council of Ten
limited its powers to civil suits, and in these it could act only when the
parties appealed to it (Schiavi, l.c. p. 329). (see
image)
Rio e Ponte delle Guglie, Showing High Houses of Modern Ghetto
.
(From a photograph.)
The most powerful weapon of which the heads of the community could avail
themselves was that of excommunication, although it appears that legally at
least the exercise of it was not left wholly in Jewish hands. Galliccioli
records at length a successful
appeal presented to the Patriarch of Venice by
the heads of the Universitā, for permission to excommunicate those living
in the ghetto who neglected their religious duties; and the author adds that
the right to give this authority had been in the hands of the patriarch
until 1671, when it passed to the "Cattaveri" (Galliccioli, l.c.
ii. 301). It does not appear, however, from any subsequent documents that
the Jews held strictly to this dependence.
Schools for study were naturally among the most important institutions of
Jewish life in Venice at all times. In addition
to Hebrew, secular branches of study were taught in them (Schiavi, l.c.
p. 332). Although nominally restricted to the ghetto, the Jews lived in
general throughout the city, and in the sixteenth century, when the vice of
gambling raged in Venice, the ghetto also was
infected, while Jews and Christians often played together. Although the
government had already imposed penalties upon gambling, the heads of the
Universitā saw that the measure remained ineffective, and they therefore
pronounced excommunications in the synagogue against those who played
certain games. Excommunication failed in its turn; and Leon of Modena, whose
reputation was seriously stained because of his addiction to this vice,
wrote a long protest against his own excommunication, which he declared
illegal; the ban, he said, only drove people to worse sins. In all his long
discussion there is no sign of the fact that the pronouncing of the
excommunication was dependent on any but the Jews themselves. It appears
from the disquisition of Leon of Modena that the number of Jews then in
Venice was little more than 2,000. This agrees with other data of the
time, so that it seems necessary to reject the number 6,000 given for that
period in Luzzatto's "Discorso Circa il Stato degli Hebrei di
Venetia." In 1659, according to an official census, their number had
increased to 4,860 (Schiavi, l.c. p. 507). The struggle against
gaming continued, and, in addition, regulations intended to check
unnecessary luxury in dress and excessive display in banquets and family
festivals were repeatedly published in the synagogue.
Among the various societies of the period there was in
Venice, as probably in the majority of Jewish communities, one for
the ransom of Jews who had been enslaved. Venice
and Amsterdam were the two principal centers for the relief of such
unfortunates, and consequently the societies of other communities as a rule
made their headquarters in these two cities. Venice
and Amsterdam, by mutual consent, divided the field of their activities. On
the former devolved the task of effecting the ransom of those Jews who had
sailed in Turkish ships from Constantinople and other Oriental ports, and
had fallen into the hands of the Knights of St. John, who waged a fierce and
continual warfare against such ships. The Jews taken captive in these
frequent attacks were held in Malta in hope of a heavy ransom, and were most
barbarously treated. The society at Venice had
a permanent Christian delegate on the island, with the recognized title of
consul, whose duty it was to alleviate the lot of the wretched captives as
far as possible and to conduct negotiations for their ransom (Soave,
"Malta e gli Schiavi Ebrei," in "Corriere Israelitico,"
xvii. 54 et seq.).
In 1571, after the battle of Lepanto, in which the Venetians and Spaniards
conquered the Turks in the contest for the island of Cyprus, the danger of
expulsion again threatened the Jews of Venice.
During this war much ill feeling had arisen in Venice
against the Jews because one of their coreligionists, Joseph
Nasi, was said to have suggested the war, and many Venetians suspected that
the Jews of the city had sympathized with him. It was in consequence of this
ill feeling, doubtless, that the Senate, in the first transports of its joy
over the victory, issued a harsh decree in which, to show a proper gratitude
to God for so great a victory, in which "they had conquered the enemies
of His Holy Faith, as were the Jews also," it was ordained that in two
years, on the expiration of the "condotta," all Jews should leave
the city, never to return (Ravā, l.c. 1871, p. 176). This decree,
however, was entirely revoked, either as a result of reflection or in
deference to some powerful intervention.
In 1572 Sultan Salim II. sent the rabbi Solomon Ashkenazi, who, both as a
physician and as a statesman, possessed great influence with the Divan, as a
special ambassador to the Senate, charged with a secret mission to conclude
an offensive and defensive alliance between the two states against Spain (Grätz,
"Gesch." ix., note 7). The Senate received him with all the honors
due the ambassador of a great power, and, although it did not accede to his
proposals, it sent him back with presents. Ashkenazi availed himself of this
opportunity to defend the cause of his coreligionists, and he seems to have
obtained not only the revocation of the decree of expulsion, but also the
promise that such expulsions should never again be proposed (Grätz, l.c.
ix. 416).
An event, in itself of minor importance, yet noteworthy as one of the
results of the great agitation aroused throughout the Jewish world by the
Messianic claims of Shabbethai Ẓebi, was the brief stay in
Venice of the visionary Nathan
Ghazzati. Even after the apostasy of Shabbethai Ẓebi had opened the eyes
of the majority and calmed the excitement, Nathan continued to believe in
him, or pretended to do so. He claimed to have had celestial visions, and
proclaimed himself the prophet Elijah, the precursor of the Messiah, thus
endeavoring to inflame the popular mind anew and revive the old excitement.
Driven from Salonica and other cities, he went to
Venice in 1668, where, in view of the credulity of the times, his
presence might have been dangerous. Scarcely was his arrival known to the
rabbis and heads of the Universitā when they called him before their
tribunal and made him sign a document confessing the falsity of his claims
to have had celestial visions, and denying that Shabbethai was the Messiah.
This done, they warned him to leave at once and had him escorted to the
frontier (Ravā, l.c. 1871, p. 307; Samuel Aboab, "Debar Shemuel,"
responsum No. 375, Venice, 1702). (see
image)
Interior of the Synagogue, Venice
.
(From a photograph.)
While the administration of the Venetian republic was always under papal
influence, a spirit of comparative tolerance prevailed there, as is usual in
maritime and commercial cities, and the Jews, like all others, were free
from restrictions in their worship. Well organized and strong, the republic
always maintained order and fulfilled its compacts faithfully. The "condotte"
were religiously observed, and the lives and property of Jews were
protected. Local outbreaks against the Jews were of rare occurrence and were
quickly followed by exemplary punishments (Osimo, "Narrazione della
Strage Compita Contra gli Ebrei d' Asolo," Padua, 1875). The
Inquisition existed at Venice, although it was
not admitted until 1279, after long opposition; but its jurisdiction
extended only over Christian heretics, and even over them its power was much
restricted. In 1570 the inquisitors of Padua wished to compel the Jews to
attend sermons in their churches. On this occasion the Senate recalled them
to their proper province, but it appears that they succeeded at some later
time, for the greater part of a sermon which was preached to the Jews in one
of the churches in Padua in 1715 is still preserved (Ciscato, l.c.
pp. 140-141). At all events, continual contact in daily life often led
naturally to friendly relations between Jews and Christians, and the
government was enlightened enough to encourage them. In 1553 the council
granted Kalonymus, a Jewish physician, the means necessary to keep his son
at his studies, "so that he may become a man useful in the service of
this illustrious city" (Romanin, "Storia Documentata di Venezia,"
v. 337, note 3).
In the great financial stress in which the republic was placed during the
long and expensive war with the Turks the Jews were obliged to pay heavy
taxes. Nevertheless, their contributions, like those of the other citizens,
were often spontaneous; and the names of the bankers Anselmo and Abramo, who
had voluntarily contributed 1,000 ducats, with those of other contributors,
were inscribed in a book of parchment "in everlasting remembrance"
(Schiavi, l.c. p. 320). Most important of all, however, was the
activity of the Jews in maritime commerce; in 1579, in the interest of this
commerce, permission was extended to many Jews of Spanish and Portuguese
extraction to remove from Dalmatia to Venice,
where they received privileges which were obtained for them by their
coreligionist Daniel Rodriguez, who was then Venetian consul in Dalmatia,
and who was highly esteemed by the republic for his important services in
furthering its commerce in the Orient (Ravā, l.c. 1871, p. 176).
Naturally, this maritime commerce continued to be favored by the government;
and in 1686 the Portuguese Aronne Uziel was the first to obtain a patent for
free commerce under the Venetian flag in the Orient and Occident. He was one
of the first shipowners of the republic: he traded with Zante, Cephalonia,
Corfu, and Constantinople; and his business was so great that in twenty
years he paid 451,000 ducats to Venice in
duties (Schiavi, l.c. p. 514). Among other Jewish shipowners one of
the most important was Abramo Franco, whose duty it was to provide for the
loading of six merchantmen (ib.). To come down to more recent times,
special mention should be made in this connection of the two brothers Baron
Giuseppe Treves dei Bonfil, the ancestor of the present barons of that name,
and Isaaco Treves, on account of the expedition which they undertook for the
first time into the western hemisphere. They sailed under the Venetian flag
with a cargo of flour and other goods, returning with coffee and sugar
(Soave, in "Il Vessillo Israelitico," 1878, p. 115). Giuseppe
Treves received the title of baron from Napoleon I. on account of his great
services to the city, both commercially and otherwise (Maratti, "Venezia
ed i Veneziani," iv. 256).
Domestic trade continued to be limited legally to second-hand goods, but as
a matter of fact this nominal restriction counted for little, and with the
growth of the city liberty of trade grew also. In the shops of the ghetto
wares of all sorts were sold, among them glass, decorated crystal, gold
ornaments, tapestries, embroideries, and books (Schiavi, l.c. p.
506). A trade of special importance, against which ineffectual prohibitions
were several times issued, was that in precious stones; the sovereigns of
Europe were the first to employ Jews for selling, buying, and exchanging
gems (ib.). Jews were prominent also in engineering. In 1444 a decree
of the Senate called "a certain Solomon, a Hebrew by race, to be
present at conferences concerning the diversion of the Brenta, because he
has great fame for skill in matters concerning water" (Zendrini, "Memorie
dello Stato Antico e Moderno delle Lagune di Venezia," i. 102, Padua,
1811). (see
image)
Title-Page of a Ritual Used by the Jewish Community of Tripoli, Printed at
Venice 1680.
(From the Sulzberger collection in the Jewish Theological Seminary of
America.)
In 1490 an engineer, wishing to associate himself with some Jews in the
mounting of a machine which
he had invented, asked the Senate whether the laws concerning the granting
of privileges to inventors were applicable to Jews as well as to others. To
this the Senate replied that in such matters no distinction was made between
Venetians and foreigners, between Jews and Christians (Romanin, l.c.
v. 337, note C). One Ẓarfati, in the second half of the sixteenth
century, invented certain improvements in the methods of silk-weaving, and
his studies were published at Rome and obtained for him a privilege from
Pope Sixtus V. (Schiavi, l.c. p. 504). In 1630 a certain Naḥman
Judah obtained permission to manufacture cinnabar, sublimate, and similar
compounds, on condition that the business should be carried on under the
name of a Christian (Schiavi, l.c. p. 505). In 1718 another
Ẓarfati was permitted to manufacture not only cinnabar and sublimate,
but also aqua fortis, white lead, minium, etc. (ib.).
Under the restrictions placed upon them Jews could not contribute much to
general literature; mention must be made nevertheless of the grammarian
Elijah
Levita, who spent a great part of his life in Venice
(Ravā, l.c. 1871, p. 335; Grätz, l.c. ix. 225). Noteworthy
also were the two rabbis already mentioned,
Leon of Modena (1579-1649), at whose sermons even nobles and ecclesiastics were
present, and Simeon (Simḥah)
Luzzatto (1590-1663), who, besides the "Discorso," wrote "Socrate,
Ossia dell' Intendimento Humano," which he dedicated to the doge and
Senate. Reference should also be made to the poetess Sara Copia
Sullam (1592-1641), who was regarded by several critics after her death as one
of the most illustrious writers of verse in Italy (Soave, l.c. 1876,
p. 198). Other authors of this period who usually wrote only in Hebrew were:
David
Nieto (1654-1728), author of the "Maṭṭeh Dan"; Moses
Gentili (d. 1711), author of "Meleket Maḥshabot"; his son
Gershon (d. 1717, at the age of seventeen), author of the "Yad
Ḥaruzim"; Rabbi Simeon Judah Perez; and Jacob
Saraval (d. 1782). Among the physicians of the republican period the most
distinguished were Jacob
Mantino (1490-1549), a native of Tortosa, who was directed by circumstances to
Venice, and who became chief physician to Pope Paul III.; and
Giuseppe Tamari, who held the office of city physician (Ravā, l.c.
1871, p. 334).
One of the conditions always imposed upon the Jews of
Venice was that of keeping banks for lending money; and to insure
their continuance the "condotta" of 1534 placed this obligation
upon the Universitā as a body. Although these banks at first satisfied the
requirements of the citizens and were at the same time a source of gain to
those who kept them, they finally ended in a great financial disaster. The
community, which formerly had been very rich, declined rapidly during and
after the war with the Turks over the island of Candia (1645-55), the cause
being the enormous burdens laid upon it by the expenses of the war. Many
emigrated to escape these burdens; the plague of 1630, with the consequent
stagnation of business, drove others out; and bad administration was
responsible for other departures; so that in order to fulfil its obligations
the community was forced to sink deeper and deeper into debt, which finally
reached the sum of nearly a million ducats. As soon as the government saw
the peril of an institution which was considered a necessity to the state,
it endeavored to remedy the evil by adopting more easy terms of payment and
by making other arrangements within its power; but when all other methods
had proved insufficient it was compelled finally to proclaim the Universitā
a private corporation to enable it legally to announce its insolvency. In
1735 the Universitā suspended payments, and a compromise was effected with
its creditors with the support and protection of the government. The banks
continued to exist, however, even after the fall of the republic, and until
1806, when they were closed by an imperial decree. On that occasion the Jews
gave the commune all the money and property in the banks, having a total
value of 13,000 ducats, to be devoted solely to charity. The municipality
publicly expressed its gratitude for this gift ("Gazetta di Venezia,"
Oct. 6, 1806).
The Universitā seems soon to have recovered from its failure; for in 1776,
on the expiration of one of the "condotte," certain commercial
restrictions were proposed as a check upon the excessive influence which the
Jews had acquired. These proposals gave rise to many heated discussions. The
majority sided with the Jews, and called attention to the fact that several
Jewish families had acquired large fortunes by their thrift and were of
service to industry, besides giving employment to many of the poor. The
assistance they had rendered to the state was also called to mind, special
emphasis being laid upon the noble conduct of Treves, who had loaned the
treasury without interest the money necessary for the execution of the
treaty of Barbary. After a long debate, however, the passions and influence
of a few powerful reactionaries prevailed, and the proposals became law (Romanin,
l.c. viii. 212).
Several years then passed without incident, when the republic, becoming
involved in difficulties with Napoleon, reconstituted itself as a democracy.
In consequence all citizens were declared equal in the eyes of the law, and
all legal discriminations against the Jews became null and void. Each strove
to outdo the other in demonstrating his fraternity, and on July 11, 1797,
amid great popular rejoicing, the gates of the ghetto were torn down and its
name changed to "Contrada dall' Unione" (= "Street of
Union"). Many speeches of lofty tone were made on this occasion, and
even priests were present at the ceremony, setting the example in evidencing
the feeling of fraternity, for which they were praised by the new
municipality. The latter had been quickly constituted, and three Jews had at
once taken their places in it (Romanin, l.c. x. 222).
Yet even this revolution, though made in the spirit demanded by the times,
could not save the republic, which was powerless before the invading armies
of France. In the very month in which this change of government took place
Napoleon declared war on Venice, and the
Senate, wishing at least to make an attempt at resistance, invited the Jews
and the various religious corporations of the city to contribute all the
available silver in their places of worship for the defense of the city
against the impending attack. The Jews enthusiastically responded,
among the first, to this appeal; and again they received from the Senate a
gratifying letter of thanks (Soave, l.c. 1876, p. 38). The attack,
however, was never delivered; for the Senate abandoned the republic on Oct.
17, 1797, and Austria and France signed the treaty of Campo Formio, by which
the city was assigned to Austria. The latter took possession of it at once
(Jan. 15, 1798), and the Jews by this change of government lost their civil
equality. They regained it, however, in 1805, when the city became a part of
Italy, but lost it once more in 1814, when, on the fall of Napoleon, the
city again came under Austrian control.
When the news of the revolution at Vienna reached
Venice in 1848 the city seized the opportunity to revolt, and, almost
without bloodshed, forced the Austrian garrison to capitulate (March 22,
1848). It then proclaimed anew the republic of Saint Mark and elected a
provisional government, of which two Jews formed a part Isaaco Pesaro
Maurogonato (appointed to the Ministry of Finance) and Leone Pincherle.
Austria, however, reconquered the territory and held it until 1866, when it
became part of the united kingdom of Italy; from that time the complete
equality of Jews and Christians has been firmly established, as in all other
parts of the country.
According to the last census, the Jewish community of
Venice numbers 2,000; and it now bears the name of the Jewish
Fraternity of Religion and Philanthropy. It possesses many institutions for
study and benevolence, and is one of the most cultured Jewish communities in
Italy. Among the Venetians of most recent times who have become
distinguished are: Samuel Romanin, the learned historian of
Venice, in whose honor a bust was placed in the Pantheon of
Venice; I. P. Maurogonato, already mentioned, who for many years was
vice-president of the Chamber of Deputies; Luigi Luzzatti, who was
repeatedly minister of the treasury; the Treves dei Bonfili family, whose
members still continue, as in the time of the republic, to be distinguished
for their philanthropy and for their services to their fellow citizens; the
poetess Eugenia Pavia Gentilomo Fortis; the physicians Namias and Asson; and
the rabbi Abramo Lattes. In the industrial field also the Venetian Jews are
well represented, being interested in many of the numerous factories and
establishments on the islands around Venice,
either as proprietors or as managers.
Bibliography
:
Samuel
Romanin
, Storia Documentata di Venezia
;
Abraham
Lattes
, in Venezia e le Sue Lagune
,
vol. i.
, part ii., Appendix;
Schiavi
, Gli Ebrei in Venezia e nelle Sue Colonie, in Nuova Antologia
, 3d series,
vol. xlvii.
;
Vittore
Ravā
, in Educatore Israelitā
,
1871, 1872
;
Cesare
Musatti
, Il Maestro Moise Soave
;
M.
Soave
, Malta e gli Schiavi Ebrei
, in Corriere Israelitico
,
xvii.
;
Ciscato
, Gli Ebrei in Padova
;
Osimo
, Narrazione della Strage Compita Contra gli Ebrei di Asolo
;
Grätz
, Gesch.
passim;
Galliccioli
, Memoria Antiche Venete
;
Simeon
Luzzatto
, Discorso Circa il Stato degli Hebrei
, etc.;
Leon
of Modena, Historia dei Riti Ebraici
, Paris,
1637
.
D.
E.
L.