History of Jewish Persecution

1536-1537 A.D. – Saxony, Germany – Jews Expelled (Paul Johnson, ‘A History of the Jews’, p. 242; Bell and Burnett, ‘ Jews, Judaism, and The Reformation in Sixteenth Century Germany’, p. 436, 443)

1539 A.D. – Hesse, Germany – Jews Expelled (Bell and Burnett, ‘ Jews, Judaism, and The Reformation in Sixteenth Century Germany’, p. 436)

1539 A.D. – Naples, Italy – Jews Expelled again (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 286)

1540 A.D. – Milan, Italy – Jews Expelled by the occupying Spanish; exhiled to The Levant (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 187)

1540 A.D. – Naples, Italy – Jews Expelled (P.E. Grosser/E.G. Halperin, ‘Anti-Semitism: Causes and Effects’)

1540 A.D. – Prague, Hungary – Jews Expelled

1541 A.D. – Otranto, Italy – Jews Expelled (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 287)

1541 A.D. – Naples, Italy – Jews Expelled again (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 180, 189, 286)

1541 A.D. – Tittingen, Germany – Jews Expelled for ritual murder (Bell and Burnett, ‘ Jews, Judaism, and The Reformation in Sixteenth Century Germany’, p. 436)

1541-1542 A.D. – Bohemia, Germany – Jews Expelled by Emperor Ferdinand I for aiding invading Turks (http://www.jewishhistory.org.il)

1542 A.D. – Prague, Hungary – Jews Expelled

1542 A.D. – Piotrkow, Poland – Jews Expelled (http://www.jewishhistory.org.il)

1542 A.D. – Hildesheim, Germany – Jews Expelled (Bell and Burnett, ‘ Jews, Judaism, and The Reformation in Sixteenth Century Germany’, p. 433)

1543 A.D. – Muehlhausen, Germany – Jews Expelled (B. Booker, ‘The Lie: Exposing the Satanic Plot Behind Anti-Semitism’)

1543-1544 A.D. – Goslar, Germany – Jews Expelled (Bell and Burnett, ‘ Jews, Judaism, and The Reformation in Sixteenth Century Germany’, p. 434)

1544 A.D. – Wurzburg, Germany – Jews Expelled for ritual murder (Bell and Burnett, ‘ Jews, Judaism, and The Reformation in Sixteenth Century Germany’, p. 436)

1546 A.D. – Braunschweig, Germany – Jews Expelled (Bell and Burnett, ‘ Jews, Judaism, and The Reformation in Sixteenth Century Germany’, p. 433, 439-442)

1547 A.D. – Ancona, Italy – Jews Expelled/Self-deported after friar’s boycott of Jewish banks (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 182)

1547 A.D. – Poland – Jews Expelled/Killed for Ritual Murder (http://www.jewishhistory.org.il)

1547 A.D. – Treviso, Italy – Jews Expelled/Killed (B. Booker, ‘The Lie: Exposing the Satanic Plot Behind Anti-Semitism’)

1549 A.D. – Goslar, Germany – Jews Expelled (Bell and Burnett, ‘ Jews, Judaism, and The Reformation in Sixteenth Century Germany’, p. 434)

1550 A.D. – Henneberg, Germany – Jews Expelled (Bell and Burnett, ‘ Jews, Judaism, and The Reformation in Sixteenth Century Germany’, p. 433)

1550 A.D. – Madrid, Spain – Jews Expelled by King (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 322)

1550 A.D. – Genoa, Italy – Jews Expelled b/c non-Jew medical faculty was “jealous” (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 183, 309)

1550 A.D. – Venice, Italy – Marranno Jews Expelled (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy, p. 187)

1551 A.D. – Bavaria, Germany – Jews Expelled (P.E. Grosser/E.G. Halperin, ‘Anti-Semitism: Causes and Effects’)

1553 A.D. – Asti, Italy – Jews Expelled for Ritual Murder (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 183)

1554 A.D. – Ancona, Italy – Jews partially Expelled; burning of The Talmud ensues (R. Maryks, ‘The Jesuit Order as a Synagogue of Jews’, p. 93)

1555 A.D. – Pesaro, Italy – Jews Expelled (P.E. Grosser/E.G. Halperin, ‘Anti-Semitism: Causes and Effects’)

1555 A.D. – Rome, Italy – Jews Expelled by Cardinal Farnese/The Pope intervened/unsuccessful (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 183)

1556 A.D. – Thuringia, Germany – Jews Expelled (Bell and Burnett, ‘ Jews, Judaism, and The Reformation in Sixteenth Century Germany’, p. 430)

1556 A.D. – Benevento, Italy – Jews Expelled (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 299)

1556 A.D. – Ancona, Italy – Marrano Jews Expelled (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 314)

1556 A.D. – Ancona, Italy – All Jews Expelled (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 299, 301)

1556 A.D. – Rome, Italy – Maranno Jews Expelled/Burned at the stake (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 300)

1556 A.D. – Udine, Italy – Jews Expelled (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 309)

1557 A.D. – Prague, Hungary – Jews Expelled for 3rd time by Emperor Ferdinand I (http://www.yivoencyclopedia.org)

1557 A.D. – Bohemia, Germany- Jews Expelled for 3rd time by Emperor Ferdinand I (http://www.yivoencyclopedia.org)

1557 A.D. – Cremona, Italy – Jews Expelled for printing of Talmud and Zohar (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 303)

1558 A.D. – Recanati, Italy – Jews Expelled (http://www.jewishhistory.org.il)

1558 A.D. – Urbino, Italy – Marrano Jews Expelled by the Duke (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 302)

1559 A.D. – Austria – Jews Expelled (P.E. Grosser/E.G. Halperin, ‘Anti-Semitism: Causes and Effects’)

1559 A.D. – Bohemia, Germany – Jews Expelled for 4th time by Emperor Ferdinand I (http://www.jewishhistory.org.il)

1559 A.D. – Civitanova, Italy – Jews Expelled for attempting to convert a Franciscan friar to Judaism (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 302)

1559 A.D. – Pavia, Italy – Jews Expelled after pogroms (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 304)

1560 A.D. – Conegliano, Italy – Jews Expelled/unsuccessful (http://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org)

1560 A.D. – Piedmont, Savoy, Italy – Jews Expelled by Duke Emanuele Filiberto, “Iron Head”/cancelled shortly after intercession by a bribed Azariah de’Rossi, (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 312-313)

1560 A.D. – Monferrat, Italy – Jews Expelled (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 313)
 
1560 A.D. – Casale, Italy – Jews Expelled (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 313)

1561 A.D. – Prague, Hungary – Jews Expelled again (P.E. Grosser/E.G. Halperin, ‘AntiSemitism: Causes and Effects’)

1561-1565 A.D. – Gorizia, Italy – Jews Expelled (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 310)

1561-1565 A.D. – Friuli, Italy – Jews Expelled (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 310)

1561-1565 A.D. – Piedmont, Savoy, Italy – Jews Expelled again/cancelled again because of “20,000 florin” bribe (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 313)

1562 A.D. – Acqui, Italy – Jews Expelled after pogrom (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 313)

1566 A.D. – Madrid, Spain – Jews Expelled/Cancelled by bribe (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 322)

1565 A.D. – Prague, Hungary – Jews Expelled again (Rafael Patai, ‘The Jews of Hungary’, p. 175)

1566 A.D. – Papal States, Italy – Jews Expelled out of main city/segregated in Ghetto (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 309)

1566 A.D. – Alessandria, Italy – Jews Expelled out of city walls/segregated in Ghetto (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 309)

1567 A.D. – Conegliano, Italy – Jews Expelled/unsuccessful (http://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org)

1567 A.D. – Wurzbburg, Germany – Jews Expelled (P.E. Grosser/E.G. Halperin, ‘Anti-Semitism: Causes and Effects’)

1567-1568 A.D. – Genoa, Italy – Jews Expelled again from adjacent territories (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 183, 309)

1568 A.D. – Bologna, Italy – Jews Expelled for printing of The Talmud (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 306)

1568 A.D. – Bergheim, Germany – Jews Expelled after synagogue is plundered (Bell and Burnett, ‘ Jews, Judaism, and The Reformation in Sixteenth Century Germany’, p. 433)

1569 A.D. – Benevento, Italy – Jews Expelled by Pope Pius V (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 307)

1569 A.D. – Este, Italy – Jews Expelled (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 307)

1569 A.D. – Umbria, Italy – Jews Expelled (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 307)

1569 A.D. – Campania, Italy – Jews Expelled (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 307)

1569 A.D. – Camerino, Italy – Jews Expelled (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 307)

1569 A.D. – Fano, Italy – Jews Expelled (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 307)

1569 A.D. – Orvieto, Italy – Jews Expelled (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 307)

1569 A.D. – Spoleto, Italy – Jews Expelled (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 307)

1569 A.D. – Ravenna, Italy – Jews Expelled (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 307)

1569 A.D. – Terracina, Italy – Jews Expelled (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 307)

1569 A.D. – Perugia, Italy – Jews Expelled (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 307)

1569 A.D. – Viterbo, Italy – Jews Expelled (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 307)

1569 A.D. – Senigallia, Italy – Jews Expelled (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 307)

1569 A.D. – Pesaro, Italy – Jews Expelled (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 307)

1569 A.D. – Volterra, Italy – Jews Expelled (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 310)

1570 A.D. – Urbino, Italy – Jews Expelled by Guidubaldo della Rovere/forced into ghetto outside city walls (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 309)

1570 A.D. – Parma, Italy – Jews Expelled/shortly summoned back (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 309)

1570 A.D. – Piacenza, Italy – Jews Expelled/shortly summoned back (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 309)

1570 A.D. – Florence, Italy – Jews of the Banking family Da Pisa Expelled for Usury (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 310)

1570 A.D. – Florence, Italy – All Jews of the 21 “contados” Expelled by Cosimo I Medici (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 311)

1571 A.D. – Brandenburg, Austria – Jews Expelled (P.E. Grosser/E.G. Halperin, ‘Anti-Semitism: Causes and Effects’)

1571 A.D. – Berlin, Germany – Jews Expelled (http://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org)

1571 A.D. – Sienna, Italy – Jews Expelled (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 311)

1571 A.D. – Venice, Italy – Jews Expelled for aiding the Turks at Lepanto/cancelled two years later by a “lavish bribe” on the part of the Jews (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 311)

1572 A.D. – Lucca, Italy – Jews Expelled/no explanation (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 309)

1573 A.D. – Breisgau and other towns in Austria – Jews Expelled (Bell and Burnett, ‘ Jews, Judaism, and The Reformation in Sixteenth Century Germany’, p. 430)

1573 A.D. – Germany – Jews Expelled (Marvin Lowenthal, ‘The Jews of Germany: A Story of Sixteen Centuries’, p. 202)

1575 A.D. – The Palatinate, Germany – Jews Expelled (Philip Broadhead/Chris Cook, ‘The Routledge Companion to Early Modern Europe, 1453-1763’)

1575 A.D. – Casale, Italy – Jews Expelled for not wearing “Jewish Badge of Shame” (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 313)
 
1576 A.D. – Gellnausen, Germany – Jews Expelled finally for what they did in 1516 (Bell and Burnett, ‘ Jews, Judaism, and The Reformation in Sixteenth Century Germany’, p. 442)

1577 A.D. – Mantua, Italy – Jews Expelled for moneylending (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 313)

1581 A.D. – Diosces of Basel, Germany – Jews Expelled (Baden)

1581 A.D. – Ferrara, Italy – Jews Expelled by Duke Alfonso (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 314)

1582 A.D. – Pavia, Italy – Jews Expelled for Heresy (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 322)

1582 A.D. – The Netherlands – Jews Expelled (P.E. Grosser/E.G. Halperin, ‘Anti-Semitism: Causes and Effects’)

1582 A.D. – Hungary – Jews Expelled (Rafael Patai, ‘The Jews of Hungary’, p. 399)

1583 A.D. – Trieste, Italy – Jews Expelled due to “atrocious crimes”, likely Ritual Murder/cancelled (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 310)

1583 A.D. – Campo di Fiori, Italy – Jews Expelled/Burned at the stake (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 314)

1585 A.D. – Venice, Italy – Jews Expelled/cancelled/confined to Ghetto (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 323)

1587 A.D. – Hanover, Germany – Jews Expelled after Protestant preachers preach against Jews, Usury, and their toleration (Bell and Burnett, ‘ Jews, Judaism, and The Reformation in Sixteenth Century Germany’, p. 433)

1590 A.D. – Lombardy, Italy – Jews Expelled by King Philip II of Spain (William Thomas Walsh, ‘Phillip II’, p. 137)

1590 A.D. – Milan, Italy – Jews Expelled (Alessandria)

1590 A.D. – Mantua, Italy – “Foreign” Jews Expelled (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 325)

1590 A.D. – Petrokov, Poland – Jews Expelled for Ritual Murder (B. Booker, ‘The Lie: Exposing the Satanic Plot Behind Anti-Semitism’, Ch. 4)

1590-1591 A.D. – Braunshweig/Wolfenbuttel, Germany – Jews Expelled (Bell and Burnett, ‘Jews, Judaism, and The Reformation in Sixteenth Century Germany’, p. 428)

1591 A.D. – Hanau, Germany – Jews Expelled for what they did in 1516 (Bell and Burnett, ‘Jews, Judaism, and The Reformation in Sixteenth Century Germany’, p. 442)

1591 A.D. – Pavia, Italy – Jews Expelled again by King Philip (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 322)

1591 A.D. – Milan, Italy – Jews Expelled by King Philip (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 322)

1591 A.D. – Cremona, Italy – Jews Expelled (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 323)

1591 A.D. – Lodi, Italy – Jews Expelled (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 323)

1591 A.D. – Alessandria, Italy – Jews Expelled (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 323, 343)

1593 A.D. – Perugia, Italy – Jews Expelled by Pope Clement VIII (https://archive.is/WuTpH)

1593 A.D. – Bologna, Italy – Jews Expelled by Pope Clement VIII (https://archive.is/P2UBI)

1593 A.D. – Brandenburg, Austria – Jews Expelled (Henry Wickham Steed, ‘The Hapsburg Monarchy’, 1914, p. 60)

1593 A.D. – The Papal States, Italy – Jews Expelled (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 300, 313)

1593 A.D. – Bavaria, Germany – Jews Expelled (James F. Harris, ‘The People Speak: AntiSemitism and Emancipation’, p. 17)

1593 A.D. – Brunswick/Braunschweig, Germany – Jews Expelled (P.E. Grosser/E.G. Halperin, ‘Anti-Semitism: Causes and Effects’)

1594 A.D. – Halberstadt, Germany – Jews expelled by Bishop Henry Julius (https://archive.is/Kifol)

1595 A.D. – Hildersheim, Germany – Jews Expelled; reversed in 1601 (Bell and Burnett, ‘Jews, Judaism, and The Reformation in Sixteenth Century Germany’, p. 431)

1597 A.D. – Cremona – Jews Expelled (P.E. Grosser/E.G. Halperin, ‘Anti-Semitism: Causes and Effects’)

1597 A.D. – Pavia – Jews Expelled (P.E. Grosser/E.G. Halperin, ‘Anti-Semitism: Causes and Effects’)

1597 A.D. – Lodi – Jews Expelled (P.E. Grosser/E.G. Halperin, ‘Anti-Semitism: Causes and Effects’)

1597 A.D. – Milan, Italy – Jews Expelled (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 182)

1598 A.D. – Hanover, Germany – Jews Expelled (Bell and Burnett, ‘ Jews, Judaism, and The Reformation in Sixteenth Century Germany’, p. 434)

1599 A.D. – Genoa, Italy – Jews Expelled (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 183)

1600 A.D. – Rome, Italy – Jews Expelled/Burned at the stake (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 288)

1600 A.D. – Mantua, Italy – Jews burned alive for “sorcery” (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 325)

1602 A.D. – Mirandola, Italy – Jews Expelled for failing to wear “Jewish Badge of Shame” (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 326, 341)

1603 A.D. – Verona, Italy – Jews accused of Ritual Murder (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 388)

1608 A.D. – Spain – crypto-Jews expelled from the Society of Jesus (Jesuits) by Jesuit Superior-General Claudio Acquaviva (Robert Markys, ‘The Jesuit Order as a Synagogue of Jews: Jesuits of Jewish Ancestry and Purity-of-Blood Laws in the early Society of Jesus’, p. 146)

1609 A.D. – London, England – Jews Expelled (https://archive.is/ww4sT)

1611 A.D. – Casale, Italy – Jews accused of Ritual Murder (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 388)

1612 A.D. – Guine, Africa – Natives and Portuguese Christians attempt to expel Jews; denied by King Baol of Lambaia after gifts/bribery (Kagen and Morgan, ‘Atlantic Diasporas: Jews, Conversos, and Crypto-Jews in the Age of Mercantilism, 1500-1800’, p. 176, 283)

1612 A.D. – Guine, Africa – Natives and Portuguese Christians attempt (again) to expel Jews; denied by the King of Sine Bur Sun after bribe (Kagen and Morgan, ‘Atlantic Diasporas: Jews, Conversos, and Crypto-Jews in the Age of Mercantilism, 1500-1800’, p. 176, 283)

1612 A.D. – Casale, Italy – Jews Expelled/Confined to Ghetto outside city (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 314)

1612-1614 A.D. – Rovigo, Italy – Jews Expelled (unsuccessful)/Confined to Ghetto (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 325 371)

1614 A.D. – Frankfort, Germany – Jews Expelled; allowed to resettle within a decade (P.E. Grosser/E.G. Halperin, ‘Anti-Semitism: Causes and Effects’; Bell and Burnett, ‘ Jews, Judaism, and The Reformation in Sixteenth Century Germany’, p. 33)

1614 A.D. – Baden, Germany – Jews Expelled (https://archive.is/AJtYL)

1615 A.D. – Worms, Germany – Jews Expelled; allowed to resettle within a decade (P.E. Grosser/E.G. Halperin, ‘Anti-Semitism: Causes and Effects’; Bell and Burnett, ‘ Jews, Judaism, and The Reformation in Sixteenth Century Germany’, p. 33)

1615 A.D. – France – Jews Expelled by King Louis XIII of France (William Chester Jordan, ‘The French Monarchy and the Jews: From Philip Augustus to the Last Capetians’, p. 180)
 
1618 A.D. – German towns – Jews Expelled during 30 Years War (http://archive.is/U8tH8#selection-957.260-957.343)

1618 A.D. – Moravian towns – Jews Expelled during 30 Years War (http://archive.is/U8tH8#selection-957.260-957.343)

1619 A.D. – Kiev, Russia – Jews Expelled (http://archive.is/xUXRC)

1620 A.D. – Florence, Italy – Jewish silkweavers Expelled for illegality (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 372)

1622 A.D. – Udine, Italy – Jews Expelled (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 309)

1623 A.D. – Piedmont, Italy – Jewish Goldsmiths/Merchants Expelled (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 376)

1624 A.D. – Ferrara, Italy – Jews Expelled/Self-Deport (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 321)

1626 1627 A.D. – Mantua, Italy – Jewish Merchants Expelled/Re-called quickly after anti-Jewish riot (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 338, 375)

1628 A.D. – Casale, Italy – Jews accused of Ritual Murder (again) (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 388)

1629 A.D. – Mantua, Italy – Jews Expelled for being loyal to the ousted ruler Charles de Rethel (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 339)

1637 A.D. – Conegliano, Italy – Jews Expelled/Confined to Ghetto (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 325)

1637 A.D. – Mirandola, Italy – Jewish synagogues destroyed after pogrom (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 383)

1638 A.D. – Modena, Italy – Jews Expelled/Confined to Ghetto (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 328, 340)

1639 A.D. – Massa, Italy – Jews Expelled/Self-Deport (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 321)

1639 A.D. – Bagnacavallo, Italy – Jews Expelled/Confined to Ghetto outside city (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 321)

1639 A.D. – Rome, Italy – Jewish insurrection in the Ghetto/Brutally suppressed (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 380)

1639 A.D. – Padua, Italy – Jewish Merchants/Traders partially expelled after riots for 6 days (c. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 389)

1639 A.D. – Turin, Italy – Jews Expelled for siding with enemy after city is sacked during civil war (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 389)

1639 A.D. – Pisa, Italy – Jews Murdered after pogroms at University (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 389)

1648 A.D. – Ferrara, Italy – Jews Expelled after assault on Ghetto (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 332)

1648 A.D. – Ukraine – Jews Expelled (P.E. Grosser/E.G. Halperin, ‘Anti-Semitism: Causes and Effects’)

1648 A.D. – Poland – Jews Expelled (Bernard D. Weinryb, ‘The Jews of Poland: A Social and Economic History of the Jewish Community in Poland from 1100 to 1800, p. 50)

1648 A.D. – Gorizia, Italy – Jews Expelled/Self-Deported (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 328)

1649 A.D. – Hamburg, Germany – Jews Expelled (https://archive.is/b6260)

1654 A.D. – New Amsterdam, United States – Jews Expelled by Peter Stuyvesant

1654 A.D. – Little Russia (Beylorus) – Jews Expelled (P.E. Grosser/E.G. Halperin, ‘AntiSemitism: Causes and Effects’)

1655 A.D. – Sandomierz, Poland – Jews Expelled/Killed (B. Booker, ‘The Lie: Exposing the Satanic Plot Behind Anti-Semitism’)

1655 A.D. – Tamobrzeg, Poland – Jews Expelled/Killed (B. Booker, ‘The Lie: Exposing the Satanic Plot Behind Anti-Semitism’)

1656 A.D. – Perisa – Jews Expelled by Sultan Shah Abbas II

1656 A.D. – Lithuania – Jews Expelled (P.E. Grosser/E.G. Halperin, ‘Anti-Semitism: Causes and Effects’)

1660 A.D. – London, England – city petitions Charles II to expel Jews on restoration of Stuarts/Jewish commerce hurting England/unsuccessful (Johnathon Israel, ‘ European Jewry in the Age of Mercantilism, 1550-1750’, p. 160)

1665 A.D. – Jamaica – Jews Expelled (many moving to New York) (Kagan and Morgan, ‘Atlantic Diasporas: Jews, Conversos, and Crypto-Jews in the Age of Mercantilism, 1500- 1800’, p. 37)

1665 A.D. – Verona, Italy – Jews Killed after plague/pogrom (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 357)

1666 A.D. – Cayenne (French territory in the Caribbean) – Jews Expelled after French defeat the Dutch (Kagen and Morgan, ‘Atlantic Diasporas: Jews, Conversos, and Crypto-Jews in the Age of Mercantilism, 1500-1800’, p. 46)

1666 A.D. – Este, Italy – Jews Expelled/Confined to Ghetto for Heresy (Sabbatianism) (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 325)

1669 A.D. – Oran, North Africa – Jews Expelled for Heresy (Sabbatianism) (P.E. Grosser/E.G. Halperin, ‘Anti-Semitism: Causes and Effects’)

1669-1671 A.D. – Reggio, Italy – Jews Expelled/Self-Deported to Palestine (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 328)

1670 A.D. – Vienna, Austria – Jews Expelled by Emperor Leopold I (Joseph A. Biesinger, ‘Germany: A Reference Guide from the Renaissance to the Present’, p. 216)

1671 A.D. – Fulda, Germany – Jews Expelled (Bell and Burnett, ‘ Jews, Judaism, and The Reformation in Sixteenth Century Germany’, p. 432)

1678 A.D. – Florence, Italy – Jewish merchants/manufacturers Expelled (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 372)

1678 A.D. – Yemen – Jews Expelled by Sultan Mehmed IV for Heresy (Sabbatianism) (Necan Alkan, ‘Dissent and Heterodoxy in the Late Ottoman Empire’, 2008)

1679 A.D. – Turin, Italy – Jews Expelled/Confined to Ghetto (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 328, 372)

1681 A.D. – Reggio, Italy – Jews Expelled to ghetto outside city (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 340)

1682 A.D. – Marseilles, France – Jews Expelled by Louis XIV for Jewish commerce/treason/giving the Duth info on war planning (Johnathon Israel, ‘European Jewry in the Age of Mercantilism, 1550-1750, p. 162)

1682 A.D. – Bordeaux, France – Jews Expelled by Louis XIV for Jewish commerce/treason/giving the Duth info on war planning (Johnathon Israel, ‘European Jewry in the Age of Mercantilism, 1550-1750, p. 163)
 
We have a thread about Jewish history and the Holocaust, but I thought a thread specifically about Jewish persecution, other than just the Holocaust, is important. The reason being that it sheds light on why the Holocaust even happened. The Holocaust did not happen out of the blue as every evil done to the Jews was done to them centuries prior in Europe such as forcing Jews to wear special garb to identify them for persecution because they looked like everyone else, forcing them out of entire countries, putting them in Jewish ghettos, and rounding them up in mass for extermination.

Once you get this historical perspective, you better understand the role antisemitism has played since the dawn of time.

So, the question is not what caused the Holocaust, the question is what caused this rabid antisemitism as far back as history is recorded?

It really makes the Holocaust deniers look foolish once you learn this history of the Jewish plight in Europe that happened centuries prior to the event.
Roman propaganda promoting the idea that the Jews killed Jesus. So.bad in fact, that the pope supported Hitler. General differences between the majority population and Jews, which always have been and remain an extreme minority in any nation and the world. That which is different is always chastised, ridiculed or persecuted. Ultimately it is true as some Rabbis in history have noted about converts "one has to be really committed to convert to Judaism. Who would openly welcome all of these problems"? This is where hopefully America remains in its Judeo-Christian roots, you are a relatively large Jewish populated nation. In many ways the defender of Judaism and Christianity. In my country, both are targets. Replaced by the police state.
 
1683 A.D. – Martinique (French colony) – Jews Expelled by King Louis XIV for Jewish commerce/supplying info to pirates/treason (Johnathon Israel, ‘European Jewry in the Age of Mercantilism, 1550-1750’, p. 162)

1683 A.D. – Guadeloupe (French colony) – Jews Expelled by King Louis XIV for Jewish commerce/supplying info to pirates/treason (Johnathon Israel, ‘European Jewry in the Age of Mercantilism, 1550-1750’, p. 162)

1683 A.D. – Cayenne (French colony) – Jews Expelled by King Louis XIV for Jewish commerce/supplying info to pirates/treason (Johnathon Israel, ‘European Jewry in the Age of Mercantilism, 1550-1750’, p. 162)

1683 A.D. – Moravia – Jews Expelled by Hungarians for Heresy (Sabbatianism) (http://www.jewishhistory.org.il)

1683 A.D. – Padua, Italy – Jewish merchants Expelled for illegal activity (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 372)

1684 A.D. – Buda, Hungary – Jews Expelled after helping Turks seige the city (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 388)

1684-1687 A.D. – Trieste, Italy – Jews Expelled/Forced into Ghettos (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 337)

1691-1700 A.D. – Ferrara, Italy – Jews Expelled/Forced into Baptism (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 381)

1693-1695 A.D. – Trieste, Italy – Jews paritally Expelled/Self-Deported (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 328)

1695 A.D. – Trieste, Italy – Jews Expelled/Accused of Ritual Murder (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 337)

1697 A.D. – Tuscany, Italy – Jews accused of Ritual Murder/Sorcery/Heresy (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 410)

1700 A.D. – Leghorn, Italy – Jews Expelled for spreading Heresy (Sabbatianism) (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 405)

1700 A.D. – Casale, Italy – Jews accused of Ritual Murder for 3rd time (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 388)

1700 A.D. – Monferrat, Italy – Jews Expelled/Confined to Ghetto outside city (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 328)

1700 A.D. – Finale, Italy – Jews confined to ghetto (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 340)

1702 A.D. – Sicily, Italy – Jews Expelled/Recalled in 1740 (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 351)

1702 A.D. – Modena, Italy – Jews partially Expelled for Heresy (Sabbatianism)/Self-Deported to Palestine (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 405)

1705 A.D. – Venice, Italy – Jews accused of Ritual Murder/partially expelled (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 388)

1705 A.D. – Viterbo, Italy – Jews accused of Ritual Murder (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 388)

1708 A.D. – Pieve di Cento, Italy – Jews Expelled/Transfered (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 333)

1710 A.D. – Geoningen, The Netherlands – Jews Expelled (B. Booker, ‘The Lie: Exposing the Satanic Plot Behind Anti-Semitism’, Ch. 4)

1711 A.D. – Ancona, Italy – Jews accused of Ritual Murder/partially expelled (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 388)

1712 A.D. – Sandomir – Jews Expelled (P.E. Grosser/E.G. Halperin, ‘Anti-Semitism: Causes and Effects’)

1712 A.D. – Poland – Jews Expelled by King Augustus II for Ritual Murder (http://www.jewishhistory.org.il)

1717 A.D. – Gibraltar, British Territory – Jews Expelled (http://www.jewishhistory.org.il)

1721 A.D. – Senigallia, Italy – Jews accused of Ritual Murder (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 388)

1724 A.D. – Vercelli, Italy – Jews Expelled (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 328)

1727 A.D. – Russia – Jews Expelled by Catherine I of Russia (P.E. Grosser/E.G. Halperin, ‘AntiSemitism: Causes and Effects’)

1729 A.D. – Piedmont, Italy – Jews forced into countryside after new Constitution (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 409)

1730 A.D. – Cuorgne, Italy – Jews self-deport/transfer to Turin (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 409)

1736 A.D. – Modena, Italy – Jews Expelled/Self-Deported (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 328)

1736 A.D. – Correggio, Italy – Jews Expelled/Confined to Ghetto (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 328)

1736 A.D. – Finale, Italy – Jews forced into Ghetto for Heresy (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 416)

1737 A.D. – St. Salvatore, Italy – Jews forced to move to Casale (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 409)

1737 A.D. – Genoa, Italy – Jews Expelled (but not for long) (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 416)

1738 A.D. – Wurtemburg, Germany – Jews Expelled (P.E. Grosser/E.G. Halperin, ‘AntiSemitism: Causes and Effects’)

1739 A.D. – Monastero, Italy – Jews forced to move to Acqui (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 409)

1740 A.D. – Little Russia (Beylorus) – Jews Expelled (P.E. Grosser/E.G. Halperin, ‘AntiSemitism: Causes and Effects’)

1742 A.D. – Russian towns – Jews Expelled by Empress Elizabeth of Russia (http://www.jewishhistory.org.il)

1744 A.D. – Sardinia, Italy – Jews partially Expelled/forced into Ghettos (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 417)

1744 A.D. – Breslau, Germany – Jews Expelled by Frederik II The Great

1744 A.D. – Prague, Hungary – Jews Expelled (Rafael Patai, ‘The Jews of Hungary’, p. 319-321)

1744 A.D. – Bohemia – Jews Expelled

1744 A.D. – Hungary – Jews Expelled for the third time by Queen Maria Theresa (Rafael Patai, ‘The Jews of Hungary’, p. 320-322)

1744 A.D. – Slovakia – Jews Expelled
 
1744 A.D. – Livonia – Jews Expelled (P.E. Grosser/E.G. Halperin, ‘Anti-Semitism: Causes and Effects’)

1744 A.D. – Breslau, Germany – Jews Expelled by Fredrik II The Great

1745 A.D. – Verona, Italy – Jews partially expelled (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 413)

1745 A.D. – Moravia – Jews Expelled (P.E. Grosser/E.G. Halperin, ‘Anti-Semitism: Causes and Effects’)

1745 A.D. – Prague, Bohemia – Jews Expelled by Archduchess of Austria Maria Theresa (Philip Broadhead/Chris Cook, ‘The Routledge Companion to Early Modern Europe, 1453-1763’)

1746 A.D. – Budapest, Hungary – Jews Expelled for spreading Heresy (B. Booker, ‘The Lie: Exposing the Satanic Plot Behind Anti-Semitism’)

1746 A.D. – Sicily, Italy – Jews Expelled by King Charles IV of Bourbon (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 351)

1746 A.D. – Naples, Italy – Jews Expelled by King Charles IV of Bourbon (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 351)

1750 A.D. – Rome, Italy – Jewish Spice Traders Expelled (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 375)

1751 A.D. – Leghorn, Italy – Jewish riots/pogroms after Jews found in possession of “muskets” (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 413)

1753 A.D. – Verona, Italy – Jews remaining Expelled/Rabbis killed (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 413)

1753 A.D. – Rome, Italy – Jews partially expelled for possession of “forbidden books” (The Talmud) (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 411)

1753 A.D. – Kovard, Lithuania – Jews Expelled (P.E. Grosser/E.G. Halperin, ‘Anti-Semitism: Causes and Effects’)

1754 A.D. – Mantua, Italy – Jewish pogroms/riots (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 413)

1754 A.D. – Ferrara, Italy – Jewish pogroms/riots (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 413)

1754 A.D. – Alessandria, Italy – Jewish pogroms/riots (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 413)

1758 A.D. – Parma, Italy – Jews Expelled by Bourbon Duke (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 417)

1758 A.D. – Busseto, Italy – Jews Expelled by Bourbon Duke (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 417)

1761 A.D. – Lubeck, Germany – Jews Expelled (http://www.jewishhistory.org.il)

1761 A.D. – Bordeaux, France – Jews Expelled (P.E. Grosser/E.G. Halperin, ‘Anti-Semitism: Causes and Effects’)

1761 A.D. – Kaunas, Lithuania – Jews Expelled (https://archive.is/5ylYu)

1763 A.D. – Bohemia – Foreign-born Jews Expelled (https://archive.is/UO0Nc)

1766 A.D. – Rome, Italy – Roman Rabbis Imprisoned/Cemetary, Syangogue destroyed (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 411)

1767 A.D. – Modena, Italy – Jewish loan-bankers Expelled (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 416)

1770 A.D. – Correggio, Italy – Jews Expelled (unsuccessful) (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 416)

1772 A.D. – Poland – Jews Expelled/Deported to the Pale of Settlement (P.E. Grosser/E.G. Halperin, ‘Anti-Semitism: Causes and Effects’)

1772 A.D. – Russia – Jews Expelled/Deported to the Pale of Settlement (P.E. Grosser/E.G. Halperin, ‘Anti-Semitism: Causes and Effects’)

1775 A.D. – Warsaw, Poland – Jews expelled by Marshal Oscar von Lubomirski (Abraham P. Bloch, ‘One a Day: An Anthology of Jewish Historical Anniversaries for Every Day of the Year’, 1987, p. 24)

1775 A.D. – Alsace, France – Jews Expelled (P.E. Grosser/E.G. Halperin, ‘Anti-Semitism: Causes and Effects’)

1777 A.D. – Venice, Italy – Jewish merchants/manufacturers Expelled for criminality/racketerring (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 415, 497)

1778 A.D. – Friuli, Italy – Jews Expelled (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 423)

1779 A.D. – Correggio, Italy – Jews Expelled/Self-Deported (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 328)

1780 A.D. – Padua, Italy – Jewish silk-weavers Expelled for criminality/organized crime (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 416)

1781 A.D. – Montagnana, Italy – Jews Expelled for not staying in Ghetto (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 416)

1782 A.D. – Conselve, Italy – Jews Expelled for not staying in Ghetto (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 416)

1782 A.D. – Cittadella, Italy – Jews Expelled for not staying in Ghetto (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 416)

1783 A.D. – Ancona, Italy – 60 Jews arrested for kidnapping ring/partially Expelled (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 418)

1783 A.D. – Spilimbergo, Italy – Jews Expelled for not staying in Ghetto (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 416)

1783 A.D. – Friuli, Italy – Jews Expelled for not staying in Ghetto (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 416)

1783 A.D. – Morocco – Jews partially Expelled by Sultan Mohammed Ben Abdellah al-Khatib (http://www.jewishhistory.org.il)

1784 A.D. – Morocco – Jews Expelled again (http://www.jewishhistory.org.il)

1785 A.D. – Libya – Jews Expelled/Killed by Ali Burzi Pasha (http://www.jewishvirutallibrary.org)

1786 A.D. – Morocco – Jews Expelled for 3rd time (http://www.jewishhistory.org.il)

1786 A.D. – Jedda, Arabia – Jews Expelled by Sultan Abdulhamid I (http://www.jewishhistory.org.il)

1789 A.D. – Alsace, France – Jews Expelled again (Beatrice Philippe, ‘La Revolution et l’Empire’, 1979)

1790 A.D. – Leghorn, Italy – Jews partially Expelled after pogrom (known as the “Insurrection of Santa Giulia”) (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 426)

1790 A.D. – Florence, Italy – Jews Killed after pogrom/riot in reaction to the “Insurrection of Santa Giulia”) (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 426)

1790 A.D. – Warsaw, Poland – Jews Expelled again (https://archive.is/XdgV9)

1791 A.D. – Saint-Domingue, Hispaniola – Jews Expelled

1791 A.D. – Polish towns – Jews Expelled by Catherine II of Russia (https://archive.is/bvAYi)

1791 A.D. – Russian towns – Jews Expelled by Catherine II of Russia (https://archive.is/6Ok3U)

1793 A.D. – Ancona, Italy – Jewish Ghetto burned after conspiracy plot by Jewish Merchants is discovered (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 431)

1793 A.D. – Rome, Italy – Jews assaulted for sympathy with invading Revolutionary French forces/Assassination (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 426)

1796 A.D. – Piedmont, Italy – Jews assaulted/partially expelled after their ghetto is sacked by “reactionaries” (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 428)

1797 A.D. – Pesaro, Italy – Jews killed for engaging in plot to supply invading French with arms (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 431)

1797 A.D. – Lugo, Italy – Jews killed when city is sacked (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 430)

1797 A.D. – Padua, Italy – Jews Killed/Imprisoned for “Revolutionary sympathies” (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 432)

1797 A.D. – Kaunas, Lithuania – Jews Expelled/unsuccessful

1798 A.D. – Rome, Italy – “Viva Maria” riots/Jews Killed (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 432, 434)

1798 A.D. – Pesaro, Italy – Jews Killed/Ransomed after 2 synagogues are sacked by Italians (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 438)
 
1798 A.D. – Venice, Italy – Jews killed during Napoleon’s absence/campaign in Egypt (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 438)

1798 A.D. – Lugo, Italy – Jews killed during Napoleon’s absence/campaign in Egypt (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 438)

1798 A.D. – Cento, Italy – Jews killed during Napoleon’s absence/campaign in Egypt (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 438)

1798 A.D. – Reggio, Italy – Jews killed during Napoleon’s absence/campaign in Egypt (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 438)

1798 A.D. – Modena, Italy – Jews killed during Napoleon’s absence/campaign in Egypt (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 438)

1798 A.D. – Campformio, Italy – Jews killed during Napoleon’s absence/campaign in Egypt (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 438)

1798 A.D. – Padua, Italy – Jews killed during Napoleon’s absence/campaign in Egypt (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 438)

1798 A.D. – Verona, Italy – Jews killed during Napoleon’s absence/campaign in Egypt (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 438)

1798 A.D. – Piedmont, Italy – Jews killed during Napoleon’s absence/campaign in Egypt (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 438)

1798 A.D. – Chieri, Italy – Jews killed during Napoleon’s absence/campaign in Egypt (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 438)

1798 A.D. – Alessandria, Italy – Jews killed during Napoleon’s absence/campaign in Egypt (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 438)

1798 A.D. – Acqui, Italy – Jews killed during Napoleon’s absence/campaign in Egypt (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 438)

1798 A.D. – Fossano, Italy – Jews killed during Napoleon’s absence/campaign in Egypt (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 438)

1798 A.D. – Senigallia, Italy – Jews killed during Napoleon’s absence/campaign in Egypt (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 439)

1799 A.D. – Malta, Italy – Jews Killed/Captured/Held for Ransom after pogrom (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 350)

1799 A.D. – Urbino, Italy – Jews Killed/partially Expelled after city is recaptured from French (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 434)

1799 A.D. – Senigallia, Italy – Jews Killed/Expelled after city is sacked after French withdrawal (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 435)

1799 A.D. – Ancona, Italy – Jews Killed/Expelled/Accused of “summoning the foreigner (French)” (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 435)

1799 A.D. – Ferrara, Italy – Jews killed/Ghetto Sacked after French troops retire (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 437)

1799 A.D. – Bologna, Italy – Jews Expelled on charges of disloyalty/subversive activity (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 439)

1799 A.D. – Milan, Italy – Jews Expelled on charges of disloyalty/subversive activity (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 439)

1799 A.D. – Modena, Italy – Jews Expelled on charges of disloyalty/subversive activity (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 439)

1799 A.D. – Mantua, Italy – Jews Expelled on charges of disloyalty/subversive activity (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 439)

1799 A.D. – Elbe, Italy – Jews Expelled/Imprsoned for attacking the Catholic religion as well as priests (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 439)

1800 A.D. – Arezzo, Italy – Jews killed/Expelled along with French soldiers (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 436)

1801 A.D. – Florence, Italy – Jews Expelled/unsuccessful (Jewish bribe to Archbishop Antonia Martini) (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 436)

1801 A.D. – Sienna, Italy – Jews Expelled/Self-Deported (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 437)

1801 A.D. – Monte San Savino – Jews Expelled/Killed in “Viva Maria” riots (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 437)

1801 A.D. – Ivrea, Italy – Jews attacked/self-emigrate (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 442)

1802 A.D. – Tuscany, Italy – Jews Killed/paritally expelled by Austrians for sympathy with French (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 437)

1803 A.D. – Asti, Italy – Jews Expelled out of Ghetto (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 442)

1804 A.D. – Villages in Russia – Jews Expelled (Aleksander Solzhenitsyn, ‘200 Years Together’)

1806 A.D. – Lucca, Italy – anti-Jewish “manifestations” and commercial boycott of Jewcontrolled industries/banks (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 442)

1808 A.D. – Villages & Countrysides, Russia – Jews Expelled (Aleksander Solzhenitsyn, ‘200 Years Together’)

1809 A.D. – Sermide, Italy – Jews killed in an agrarian revolt (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 442)

1809 A.D. – Ferrara, Italy – Jews killed in an agrarian revolt (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 442)

1809 A.D. – Rovigo, Italy – Jews killed in an agrarian revolt (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 442)

1811 A.D. – Alsace, France – Jewish merchants expelled (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 442)

1814 A.D. – Elba, Italy – Napoleon partially expels Jews/limits Jewish immigration (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 442)

1814 A.D. – Piedmont, Italy – Jews once more confined to Ghettos (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 448)

1814 A.D. – Nice, Italy – Jewish students expelled from all educational institutions (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 448)

1815 A.D. – Lubeck, Germany – Jews Expelled (Joseph A. Biesinger, ‘Germany: A Reference Guide from the Renaissance to the Present’, p. 216)

1815 A.D. – Bremen, Germany – Jews Expelled (Joseph A. Biesinger, ‘Germany: A Reference Guide from the Renaissance to the Present’, p. 216)

1815 A.D. – Franconia, Germany – Jews Expelled (H.I. Bach, ‘The German Jew: A Synthesis of Judaism and Western Civilization, 1730-1930’, p. 108)
 
1815 A.D. – Swabia, Germany – Jews Expelled (H.I. Bach, ‘The German Jew: A Synthesis of Judaism and Western Civilization, 1730-1930’, p. 109)

1815 A.D. – Bavaria, Germany – Jews Expelled (H.I. Bach, ‘The German Jew: A Synthesis of Judaism and Western Civilization, 1730-1930’, p. 109)

1820 A.D. – Bremes, France – Jews Expelled (P.E. Grosser/E.G. Halperin, ‘Anti-Semitism: Causes and Effects’)

1820 A.D. – The Corso, Italy – Jewish merchants expelled (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 450)

1820 A.D. – Rome, Italy – Jews ordered back into Ghettos (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 450)

1822 A.D. – Rubiera, Italy – Jews Expelled by Duke of Medina for subversive activity (The Carbonari) (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 455)

1822 A.D. – Russian villages – Jews Expelled (B. Booker, ‘The Lie: Exposing the Satanic Plot Behind Anti-Semitism’, Ch. 4)

1824 A.D. – Mantua, Italy – Jews accused of Ritual Murder and pogromed (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 453)

1825 A.D. – Mohilev, Poland – Jews Expelled by Emperor Alexander I (https://archive.is/oLF6a#selection-2151.70-2183.27)

1825 A.D. – Vitebsk, Poland – Jews Expelled by Emperor Alexander I (https://archive.is/oLF6a#selection-2151.70-2183.27)

1828 A.D. – Slerno, Italy – Jews killed for conspiring with The Carbonari (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 455)

1829 A.D. – Rome, Italy – Jews Killed/partially expelled after death of Pope Leo XIII (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 453)

1829 A.D. – Hamah, Syria – Jews Expelled for Ritual Murder of Muslim girl (Sir Richard Francis Burton, ‘The Jew, The Gypsy, and El Islam’, 1898)

1829 A.D. – Kiev, Russia – Jews Expelled (B. Booker, ‘The Lie: Exposing the Satanic Plot Behind Anti-Semitism’, Ch. 4)

1829 A.D. – Nikolayev, Russia – Jews Expelled (B. Booker, ‘The Lie: Exposing the Satanic Plot Behind Anti-Semitism’, Ch. 4)

1830-1831 A.D. – Poland – Jews Expelled by General Ghlopicki (http://www.jewishhistory.org.il)

1831 A.D. – Leghorn, Italy – Jews partially expelled for revolutionary sympathies with Mazzini’s ‘Young Italy’ (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 457)

1831 A.D. – Moldova – Jews who could not prove their usefullness expelled (http://www.jewishhistory.org.il)

1831 A.D. – Wallchia, Poland – Jews Expelled (http://www.jewishhistory.org.il)

1833 A.D. – Leghorn, Italy – Jews partially expelled for financing/aiding Mazzini’s ‘Young Italy’ (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 457)

1836 A.D. – Bologna, Italy – Jews Expelled for Jewing the economy (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 452, 491)

1840 A.D. – Piedmont, Italy – Jewish rabbis expelled for revolutionary sympathies (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 454)

1842 A.D. – Mantua, Italy – Jews pogromed/accused of Ritual Murder (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 454)

1842 A.D. – Milan, Italy – Jews partially expelled for subversive activity (‘Young Italy’) (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 459)

1843 A.D. – Russian Border – Jews Expelled (P.E. Grosser/E.G. Halperin, ‘Anti-Semitism: Causes and Effects’)

1843 A.D. – Austria – Jews Expelled (P.E. Grosser/E.G. Halperin, ‘Anti-Semitism: Causes and Effects’)

1843 A.D. – Prussia – Jews Expelled (P.E. Grosser/E.G. Halperin, ‘Anti-Semitism: Causes and Effects’)

1844 A.D. – Genoa, Italy – Jews Bankers Expelled after violence against communisty (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 453)

1848 A.D. – Paris, France – Jews partially expelled for aiding/financing revolution (Priscilla Robertson, ‘Revolutions of 1848: A Social History’, p. 72)

1848 A.D. – Milan, Italy – Jews partially expelled for aiding/financing revolution (Priscilla Robertson, ‘Revolutions of 1848: A Social History’, p. 350)

1848 A.D. – Acqui, Italy – Jews partially expelled for aiding/financing revolution (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 466)

1848 A.D. – Venice, Italy – Jews partially expelled for aiding/financing revolution (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 493)

1848 A.D. – Berlin, Germany – Jews partially expelled for aiding/financing revolution (Priscilla Robertson, ‘Revolutions of 1848: A Social History’, p. 121)

1848 A.D. – Austria – Jews partially expelled by Hapsburgs for aiding/financing revolution (Priscilla Robertson, ‘Revolutions of 1848: A Social History’, p. 237)

1850 A.D. – Romania – Jews Expelled by Interior Minister Ion Bratianu (http://www.jewishhistory.org.il)

1851 A.D. – Venice, Italy – Jews partially expelled/self-deported (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 468)

1851 A.D. – Tuscany, Italy – Jews partially expelled (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 468)

1851 A.D. – Bologna, Italy – Jews imprisoned/partially expelled (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 468)

1851 A.D. – Ferrara, Italy – Jews Merchants Expelled for “secret society” participation (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 468)

1855 A.D. – Badia, Rovigo, Italy – Jews accused of Ritual Murder and pogromed (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 453)

1855 A.D. – Coro, Venezuela – Jews Expelled (https://archive.is/TaTDN)

1858 A.D. – Rome, Italy – Jews accused of Ritual Murder at Passover (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 471)

1858 A.D. – Sardinia, Italy – Jews pogromed/expelled (unsuccessful due to bribery to The Pope) (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 471)

1862 A.D. – Areas in the United States under General Grant’s jurisdiction – Jews Expelled (http://www.jewishhistory.org.il)

1862 A.D. – Velletri, Italy – Jewish Merchants Expelled (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 471)

1864 A.D. – Izmir, Ottoman Empire – Jews accused of Ritual Murder (Tracy K Harris, Death of a Language, p. 43)

1864 A.D. – Genoa, Italy – Jews pogromed/self-deported (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 491)

1866 A.D. – Constantinople – Jews accused of Ritual Murder (Tracy K Harris, Death of a Language, p. 43)

1866 A.D. – Galtaz, Romania – Jews Expelled (http://kehilalinks.jewishgen.org/galati … istory.htm)

1867 A.D. – Romanian villages – Jews Expelled (B. Booker, ‘The Lie: Exposing the Satanic Plot Behind Anti-Semitism’, Ch. 4)

1868 A.D. – Constantinople – Jews accused of Ritual Murder/partially expelled (Tracy K Harris, Death of a Language, p. 43)

1872 A.D. – Izmir, Ottoman Empire – Jews accused of Ritual Murder (Tracy K Harris, Death of a Language, p. 43)

1874 A.D. – Constantinople – Jews accused of Ritual Murder (Tracy K Harris, Death of a Language, p. 43)

1875 A.D. – Izmir, Ottoman Empire – Jews accused of Ritual Murder (Tracy K Harris, Death of a Language, p. 43)

1881-1884 A.D. – Russia – Jews Expelled (Alex Bein, ‘The Jewish Question: Biography of a World Problem’, p. 265)

1891 A.D. – Moscow, Russia – Jews Expelled by Governor Grand Duke Sergei (http://www.jewishhistory.org.il)
 
1910 A.D. – Kiev, Russia – Jews Expelled (http://www.jewishhistory.org.il)

1911 A.D. – Tuscany, Italy – Jews partially expelled for aiding Muslims during Italo-Turkish War (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 479)

1915 A.D. – Kovno, Russia – Jews Expelled by Commander Niolai A. (Petr L. Bark, ‘Vospominania’, 1966, p. 93)

1915 A.D. – Kurland, Russia – Jews Expelled by Commander Niolai A. (Petr L. Bark, ‘Vospominania’, 1966, p. 93)

1919 A.D. – Bavaria, Germany – Foreign-born Jews Expelled (P.E. Grosser/E.G. Halperin, ‘AntiSemitism: Causes and Effects’)

1921 A.D. – Austria – Jews Expelled (http://www.jewishhistory.org.il)

1921 A.D. – Mongolia – Jews Expelled/Deported (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_o … ntral_Asia)

1925 A.D. – Milan, Italy – Jews partially expelled/imprisoned in an “anti-Fascist” rising (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 510)

1933-1934 A.D. – Towns in Afghanistan – Jews Expelled (http://www.jewishhistory.org.il)

1934 A.D. – Piedmont, Italy – Jews arrested/expelled for “subversive activities” (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 516)

1935 A.D. – Libya (possession of Italy) – Jews stripped of citizenship/ ordered to leave within 6 months (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 529)

1935 A.D. – Aegean Islands (possession of Italy) – Jews stripped of citizenship/ordered to leave within 6 months (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 529)

1936 A.D. – Palestine – Jews killed in riots (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 518)

1937 A.D. – Milan, Italy – Mussolini issues decree prohibiting Jewish immigration/ordering Jews to evacuate within 6 months (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 527)

1937 A.D. – Florence/Triest, Italy – ‘Institute for the Study of the Jewish Problem’ is established (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 532)

1937 A.D. – Rome, Italy – Jews partially expelled/self-deported for “subversive activity” (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 532)

1937 A.D. – Milan, Italy – Jews partially expelled after riots (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 532)

1937 A.D. – Florence, Italy – Jews partially expelled after riots (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 532)

1938 A.D. – Ecuador – Jews Expelled (JEWS EXPELLED FROM ECUADOR - QUITO (Ecuador), Thursday. - The Argus (Melbourne, Vic. : 1848 - 1957) - 21 Jan 1938)

1938-1945 A.D. – Germany – Jews Expelled

1939 A.D. – Albania – Jews Expelled (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 535)

1939 A.D. – Ecuador – Jews Expelled

1939 A.D. – Poland – Jews Expelled

1939 A.D. – Hungary – Jews Expelled

1940 A.D. – France – Jews Expelled

1940 A.D. – Rome, Italy – Jews partially expelled after pogrom (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 536)

1940 A.D. – Trieste, Italy – Jews partially expelled after pogrom (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 536)

1940 A.D. – Sicily, Italy – Jews Expelled (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 537)

1940 A.D. – Sardinia, Italy – Jews Expelled (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 537)

1940 A.D. – Milan, Italy – Jewish bankers expelled for British support/pogroms (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 538)

1940 A.D. – Genoa, Italy – Jewish bankers expelled for British support/pogroms (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 538)

1940 A.D. – Fiume, Italy – Jews arrested/expelled for spreading anti-Fascist propaganda (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 538)

1941 A.D. – Africa (Italian possessions) – Jews arrested and deported after riots against them (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 538)

1941 A.D. – Austria – Jews Expelled

1941 A.D. – Checkloslavia – Jews Expelled

1942-1943 A.D. – Tripoli, Africa – Jews Expelled (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 539)

1943 A.D. – The Balkans – Jews Expelled/arrested/self-deported (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 540)

1943 A.D. – Alessandria, Italy – Jews Expelled by Minister of the Interior Buffarini Guidi (https://archive.is/1GqZ4)

1943 A.D. – Ferrara, Italy – Jews attacked/imprisoned/partially expelled for assassination of Fascist leader (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 543, 545)

1943 A.D. – Rome, Italy – Jews pogromed/100 partially expelled (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 543)

1943 A.D. – Verona, Italy – Jews stripped of citizenship (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 544)

1944 A.D. – Rome, Italy – Jews pogromed in retaliation for ambush of German troops (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 545)

1944 A.D. – Florence, Italy – Jews pogromed/sent to concentration camps (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 545)

1944 A.D. – Pisa, Italy – Jews pogromed/sent to concentration camps (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 545)

1944 A.D. – Alessandria, Italy – Jewish homes/synagogue destroyed (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 548)

1944 A.D. – Fiume, Italy – Jewish homes/synagogue destroyed (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 548)

1944 A.D. – Turin, Italy – Jewish homes/synagogue destroyed (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 548)

1944 A.D. – Casale, Italy – Jewish homes/synagogue destroyed (C. Roth, ‘The History of the Jews of Italy’, p. 549)

1947 A.D. – Yemen – Jews Expelled/Killed

1948 A.D. – Iraq – Jews Expelled by Prime Minister Nuri as-Said (Orit Bashkin, ‘New Babylonians: A History of Jews in Modern Iraq’, 2012, p. 277)

1948 A.D. – Bombay, India – Jews Expelled (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jewish_ex … _countries)

1948 A.D. – Pakistan – Jews Expelled (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jewish_ex … _countries)

1948 A.D. – West Bank – Jews Expelled

1948 A.D. – Jerusalem – Jews Expelled

1948 A.D. – Morocco – Jews Expelled (Yehuda Grinker, ‘The Emigration of Atlas Jews to Israel’, 1973)

1948-1949 A.D. – Yemen – Jews Expelled/Killed for Ritual Murder (https://archive.is/Fxqnf)
 
1956 A.D. – Egypt – Jews Expelled (Derek Hopwood, ‘Egypt, 1945-1990: Politics and Society’, 2002)

1959 A.D. – Cuba – Jews Expelled/forced into exile

1963 A.D. – Algeria, Africa – Jews Expelled after Algerian independence (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_o … in_Algeria)

1968 A.D. – Poland – Jews Expelled (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1968_Poli … cal_crisis)

1972 A.D. – Uganda – Jews Expelled by President Idi Amin (M. Jamison, ‘Idi Amin and Uganda: An Annotated Bibliography’, 1992, p. 155)

2014 A.D. – San Juan la Laguana, Guatemala – Jews Expelled due to lack of contact with locals (https://archive.is/pIGLQ)
 
This is why Holocaust and Crusades happen

And then of course other sand ******* had to throw up a Palestinian *** flag
Thankfully the locals put thier cross back




The only viable option would be to Stone the Jews and the other tan people
Should all the Jews be expelled out of the country for this do you think?

It sure beats murdering and raping the locals as they enter the county, like other minorities that will go unnamed.
 
So, the question is not what caused the Holocaust, the question is what caused this rabid antisemitism as far back as history is recorded?
The Canaanite bastards living on their land?
 
What happened to the Midians?
 
That happened in Wales
As for our country can i make a list on who can stay
Like schindler?

I would like to round me up some commie joos and lobbyist

aghajsjsjsjjsjss.webp
 
15th post
Here is a timeline for Jews having to wear special dress. This happens when the minority you target for oppression is not a different skin color and hard to identify.

1215 The Fourth Lateran Council approved cannon laws requiring that "Jews shall wear a special dress". They also had to wear a badge in the form of a ring. This was to enable them to be easily distinguished from non-Jews. This practice later spread to other countries in Europe.

1227 The Synod of Narbonne required Jews to wear an oval badge. This requirement was reinstalled during the 1930's by Hitler, who changed the Oval badge to the Star of David.

1259. A "Synod of the archdiocese of Mainz ordered Jews to wear yellow badges.

1267 The Synod of Vienna ordered Jews to wear horned hats. Thomas Aquinas said that Jews should live in perpetual servitude.

1434 Jewish men in Augsburg had to sew yellow buttons to their cloths. Across Europe, Jews were forced to wear a long undergarment, and an overcoat with a yellow patch, bells and a tall pointed yellow hat with a large button on them.

1555 A Roman Catholic Papal bull, "Cum nimis absurdum," required Jews to wear badges, and live in ghettos. They were not allowed to own any property outside the ghetto. Living conditions were dreadful; over 3,000 people were forced to live in about 8 acres of land. Women had to wear a yellow veil or scarf; men had to wear a piece of yellow cloth on their hat..
 
So, the question is not what caused the Holocaust, the question is what caused this rabid antisemitism as far back as history is recorded?
The OP doesn't really seem to be addressing his question as to causes.

Oh well.
 
Now for a timeline regarding the extermination of the Jews

475 BCE Haman is said in the Book of Esther to attempt genocide against the Jews.

First century​

19 CE Roman Emperor Tiberius expels Jews from Rome. Their expulsion is recorded by the Roman historical writers Suetonius, Josephus, and Cassius Dio.38 CE. Thousands of Jews killed by mobs in the Alexandrian pogrom, as recounted by Philo of Alexandria in Flaccus. Synagogues are defiled, Jewish leaders are publicly scourged, and the Jewish population is confined to one quarter of the city.

66-72 CE Under the command of Tiberius Julius Alexander, Roman soldiers killed about 50,000 Jews in the Alexandria riot.

70 CE Over 1,000,000 Jews perish and 97,000 are taken as slaves following the destruction of the Second Temple.

94 CE Fabrications of Apion in Alexandria, Egypt, including the first recorded case of blood libel. Although no deaths were recorded for this, many deaths would follow for the same accusation.

Second century​

115–117 Thousands of Jews are killed during civil unrest in Egypt, Cyprus, and Cyrenaica, as recounted by Cassius Dio.

132–135 Crushing of the Bar Kokhba revolt. According to Cassius Dio 580,000 Jews are killed.

167 Earliest known accusation of Jewish deicide (the notion that Jews were held responsible for the death of Jesus), made in a sermon On the Passover, attributed to Melito of Sardis. Again, even though no deaths were recorded for this event, many deaths in the future were to follow for this same accusation.

Third century​

259The Jewish community of Nehardea is destroyed.

Fourth century​

386John Chrysostom of Antioch writes eight homilies called Adversus Judaeos (lit: Against the Judaizers). See also: Christianity and antisemitism.3881 August: A Christian mob incited by the local bishop plunders and burns down a synagogue in Callinicum. Theodosius I orders that those responsible be punished, and the synagogue is rebuilt at the Christians' expense. Ambrose of Milan insists in his letter that the whole case be dropped. He interrupts the liturgy in the emperor's presence with an ultimatum that he will not continue until the case is dropped. Theodosius complies.<a href="Timeline of antisemitism - Wikipedia"><span>[</span>26<span>]</span></a>399The Western Roman Emperor Honorius calls Judaism superstitio indigna (unworthy superstition) and confiscates gold and silver collected by the synagogues for Jerusalem.

Fifth century​

438 Theodosius II's wife visits Jerusalem, and arranges for Jews to visit and pray at the ruins of the Temple Mount. This leads to Jews emigrating to Jerusalem, where some are killed after being stabbed and stoned by local monks. At the trial for the deaths the monks claimed that the stones fell from heaven and thus they were acquitted.

469 Half of the Jewish population of Isfahan is put to death and their children are brought up as 'fire-worshippers' over the alleged killing of two Magi Priests.

Sixth century​

506 Synagogue of Daphne is destroyed, and its inhabitants are massacred by a Christian mob celebrating the result of a chariot race

519 Ravenna, Italy. After the local synagogues were burned down by the local mob, the Ostrogothic king Theodoric the Great orders the town to rebuild them at its own expense.

547 Jews and Samaritans in the Caesaria are massacred after a failed revolt.<a

Seventh century​

608–610 Massacres of Jews all across the Byzantine Empire

627 Between 600 and 900 Jewish male captives including any boys showing signs of puberty are beheaded by Muslims on Muhammed's orders, many in front of their families, and the rest of the Jews are taken or sold into slavery in the Massacre of Banu Qurayza

628 93 Jews are killed in the Battle of Khaybar. Among others, the 17-year-old Jew Safiyya bint Huyayy is enslaved by Muslims, bought by Muhammed to his bed on the very night of the day when her husband was tortured and beheaded and her family is slaughtered, and later manumitted and married to him

Tenth century​

985 A number of Jewish residents in Barcelona are killed by the Muslim leader Almanzor. All Jewish owned land is handed over to the Count of Barcelona.

Eleventh century​

1021 A violent earthquake occurs, which some Greeks maintain is caused by a desecration of Jesus by the Jews. For this a number of Roman Jews are burnt at the stake.

1033 Temim ibn Ziri conquers Fez, Morocco and decimates the Jewish community, massacring 6,000 Jews during the Fez massacre.

1035 Sixty Jews are put to death in Castrojeriz during a revolt, because the Jews were considered "property" of the kingdom by the locals.

1066 Granada massacre: Muslim mob stormed the royal palace in Granada, crucified Jewish vizier Joseph ibn Naghrela and massacred most of the Jewish population of the city. "More than 1,500 Jewish families, numbering 4,000 persons, fell in one day.

1096 The First Crusade. Three hosts of crusaders pass through several Central European cities. The third, unofficial host, led by Count Emicho, decides to attack the Jewish communities, most notably in the Rhineland, under the slogan: "Why fight Christ's enemies abroad when they are living among us?" Eimicho's host attacks the synagogue at Speyer and kills all the defenders. 800 are killed in Worms. Another 1,200 Jews commit suicide in Mainz to escape his attempt to forcibly convert them (see German Crusade, 1096), and 600 are massacred in Mainz on 27 May. Attempts by the local bishops remained fruitless. All in all, 5,000 Jews were murdered.

1099 Jews fight side by side with Muslim soldiers to defend Jerusalem against the Crusaders and face massacres when it falls.

Twelfth century​

1108 Many Jews are massacred and their houses and synagogues are burned following a Muslim victory at the Battle of Uclés (1108). Of those murdered is Solomon ibn Farissol, the leader of the Castile community. This incident greatly impacted the Hebrew poet Judah HaLevi, and completely shifted the focus of his poetry.

1135 A Muslim mob in Córdoba storms into Jewish homes, takes their possessions and kills a number of them.

1143 150 Jews are killed in Ham, Somme

1145Abd al-Mu'min gives the Jewish population of Sijilmasa the choice of converting to Islam or death. At least 150 Jews who refuse to convert are massacred.

1146 100,000 Jews are massacred by the Almohad Caliphate in Fez, Morocco and 120,000 in Marrakesh.

1148 The mostly-Jewish town Lucena, Córdoba is captured by the Almohad Caliphate and local Jews are given the choice of Islam or death. This was the end of the Jewish community of Lucena

1173 Following multiple church-inspired riots, Mieszko III of Poland forbids all kinds of violence against the Jews of Poland.

1177Alfonso II of Aragon creates a charter which defines the status of Jews in Teruel. Jews are defined as "slaves of the king, belonging entirely to the royal treasury." The fee for killing a Jew is half of what the fee is for killing a Christian and is to be paid directly to the king (since Jews are considered property of the crown).

1179 The body of a Christian girl is found near the shore. The Jews of Boppard are blamed for her death, resulting in 13 Jews being murdered.

1182 Jews are expelled from Orléans. 99 Jews are burned alive in Brie-Comte-Robert.

1190 All the Jews of Norwich, England found in their houses were slaughtered, except a few who found refuge in the castle.

1190 57 Jews in St. Edmunds are killed in a massacre on Palm Sunday.

1190 500 Jews of York were massacred after a six-day siege by departing members of the Third Crusade, backed by several people indebted to Jewish money-lenders.

1191 More than 80 Jews in Bray-sur-Seine are burned at the stake after trying to execute a murderer who had killed an Israelite.

1195 After falsely being accused of ritual murder with no evidence, the daughter of Rabbi Isaac bar Asher ha-Levi is murdered, dismembered and her body parts are hung around the market place for days. Ha-Levi was killed the following day along with 8 other Jews after trying to recover what was left of his daughter's body from the mob.

Thirteenth century​

1206 Jewish homes are burned, looted, Israelites are killed and the remaining Jewish population of Halle is expelled

1209 Béziers is stormed and its inhabitants are massacred. Among those were 200 Jews. All Jewish children who survived, and did not flee, were forcibly baptized.

1212 Forced conversions and mass murder of the Jewish community of Toledo.

1221 An anti-Jewish riot erupts in Erfurt, where the Jewish quarter is destroyed along with two synagogues. Around 26 Jews are killed, and others throw themselves into fire rather than be forcibly converted. Samuel of Speyer was among those martyred.

1230 Theodore Komnenos Doukas is defeated. Since Theodore decreed many anti-Jewish laws and seized Jewish property, he was handed over to two Jews by John Asen II to personally kill him. After having pity on him and refusing to kill Theodore, the Czar had the Jews thrown off a cliff.

1232Forced mass conversions in Marrakesh, over 1,000 Moroccan Jews are killed.

1236 Crusaders attack Jewish communities of Anjou and Poitou and attempt to baptize all the Jews. Those who resisted (est. 3,000) were slaughtered.

1241 A pogrom against the Jews of Frankfurt takes place after conflicts over Jewish-Christian marriages and the enforced baptism of interfaith couples. 180 Jews are killed as a result and 24 agree to be baptized. This became known as the Judenschlacht (German for Slaughter of the Jews)

1243 11 Jews are tortured to death following a blood libel in Kitzingen Germany.

1251 The Shepherds' Crusade attacks Jewish communities across northern France.

1264 Simon de Montfort inspires massacre of Jews in London.

1267After an accusation from an old woman that the Jews had bought a Christian child from her to kill, the entire Jewish community of Pforzheim face massacres and expulsion. Rabbi Samuel ben Yaḳar ha-Levi, Rabbi Isaac ben Eliezer and Rabbi Abraham ben Gershom commit suicide to escape the cruel torture they feared.

1275 King Edward I of England passes the Statute of the Jewry forcing Jews over the age of seven to wear an identifying yellow badge, and making usury illegal, in order to seize their assets. Scores of English Jews are arrested, 300 hanged and their property goes to the Crown.1276Massacre in Fez to kill all Jews stopped by intervention of the Emir

1285 Blood libel in Munich, Germany results in the death of 68 Jews. 180 more Jews are burned alive at the synagogue.

1287 A 16-year-old boy is found dead in the Rhine. Immediately the Jews of Oberwesel are accused of killing the boy. Over 40 men, women and children were killed by rioters as a response.

1288 The Jewish population of Troyes is accused of ritual murder. 13 Jewish martyrs are burned at the stake, sacrificing themselves to spare the rest of the community.

1288 104 Jews in Bonn, Germany are killed during a pogrom.

1290 A Jewish man named Jonathan and his wife are accused of stabbing the wafer to torture Jesus. They are both burned at the stake, their house is destroyed and replaced with a chapel.

1290 The Jews of Baghdad are massacred.

1298 During the civil war between Adolph of Nassau and Albrecht of Austria, German knight Rintfleisch claims to have received a mission from heaven to exterminate "the accursed race of the Jews". Under his leadership, the mob goes from town to town destroying Jewish communities and massacring about 100,000 Jews, often by mass burning at stake. Among 146 localities in Franconia, Bavaria and Austria are Röttingen (20 April), Würzburg (24 July), Nuremberg (1 August)
 

Fourteenth century​

1320 152 Jews massacred in Castelsarrasin, France.

1320 Shepherds' Crusade attacks the Jews of 120 localities in southwest France.

1321 Jews in central France accused of ordering lepers to poison wells. After massacre of est. 5,000 Jews, King Philip V admits they were innocent.

1328 5,000 Jews are massacred and their houses are burned down following anti-Jewish preaching by a Franciscan friar from Estella, near Pamplona. That same years, the Jews of Navarre choose to burn their homes and synagogues and drown their children rather than be forcibly converted.

1328 Jewish martyr Aaron ben Zerah, along with his wife and four of his sons are executed.

1336 Armleder persecutions against Jews in Franconia and Alsace led by lawless German bands, the Armleder under the highwayman Arnold von Uissigheim. Roughly 1500 Jews are killed

1337-1338 Pogroms over host desecration across Bavaria, Austria, and Bohemia. The Jews are accused of stealing the bread of the Eucharist and trying to burn it. In Wolfsberg, Carinthia, over 70 Jews are burned at the stake and the entire Jewish community is destroyed.

1348European Jews are blamed for the plague in the Black Death persecutions. Charge laid to the Jews that they poisoned the wells. Massacres spread throughout Spain, France, Germany and Austria. More than 200 Jewish communities destroyed by violence. Many communities have been expelled and settle down in Poland.

1349 Basel: 600 Jews burned at the stake, 140 children forcibly baptized, the remaining city's Jews expelled.

1349 The Erfurt massacre was a massacre of around 3,000 Jews as a result of Black Death Jewish persecutions

1349 The entire Jewish population of Speyer is destroyed. All Jews are either killed, converted, or fled. All their property and assets was confiscated. Part of the Black Death Jewish persecutions.

1349 600 Jews are burned at the stake and the entire Jewish community of Zurich is annihilated as a part of the Black Death Jewish persecutions.

1349 The Jewish community of Worms is completely destroyed as a result of the Black Death Jewish persecutions. Hundreds of Jews set fire to their homes to avoid the oncoming torture. Their property was seized by the locals.1349Jews of Berlin are expelled and many are killed as a part of the Black Death Jewish persecutions. The city claims all property and synagogues, while the Emperor was given the cemetery and all Jewish debts. 60 Jews are murdered.

1349 The Jewish quarter of Cologne is destroyed by an angry mob, and most of the community is killed. All of their property was split up between the ransackers. It was part of the Black Death Jewish persecutions.

1349 The Strasbourg massacre was a part of the Black Death persecutions, where several hundred Jews were publicly burned to death, and the rest of them were expelled. It was one of the first and worst pogroms in pre-modern history.

1349 The Jews of Halle (Saale) are attacked.

1349 6,000 Jews are burned to death in Mainz as a part of the Black Death Jewish persecutions. When the angry mob charged, the Jews initially fought back, killing around 200 of their attackers

1360 Sephardic Jew Samuel ben Meir Abulafia is arrested and tortured to death in prison for no apparent reason. His lands are confiscated by the king

1370 The entire Jewish population of Brussels is massacred over allegations of host desecration. It was an end of the Hebrew community in Brussels. The event was commemorated by local Christians as the Sacrament of Miracle.

1384 200 Jews are killed in Noerdlingen and the community ceases to exist.

1391 Anti-Jewish riots led by Ferrand Martinez erupt in Seville.1391Led by Ferrand Martinez, countless massacres devastate the Sephardic Jewish community, especially in Castile, Valencia, Catalonia and Aragon. The Jewish quarter in Barcelona is completely destroyed. By the end of the pogroms, at least 10,000 Jews are murdered and thousands more are forcibly converted

1391 Pogrom against the Jews of Toledo on the Seventeenth of Tammuz. Jewish martyrs Israel Alnaqua and Judah ben Asher died at the stake together.

1391 Over 250 Jews are massacred by a mob in Valencia

1391 All Jewish inhabitants of Palma, Majorca are either converted or killed.

1391 More than 400 Jews are massacred in Barcelona.

1392 The Jews of Damascus are accused by Muslims of setting fire to the central mosque. Although there was no evidence presented, one Jew was burned alive, the leaders of the community were tortured, and the local synagogue was appropriated into a mosque.

1399 A Christian woman is accused of stealing hosts and giving them to Jews for the purpose of desecration. Thirteen members of the Jewish community of Posen, along with the woman are all tortured and burned alive slowly. This story, however, does not appear until the latter half of the 14th century

1399 80 Jews are murdered in Prague after a converted Jew named Peter accuses them of denigrating Christianity. A number of Jews are also jailed, including Yom-Tov Lipmann-Muhlhausen.
 

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