Lisbon massacre

The Lisbon massacre, sometimes known as the Lisbon pogrom,[1] was a massacre that happened on April 19, 1506 when Portuguese Catholics killed between 500 and 4,000 Jews who were considered "New Christians" (Portuguese: Cristãos-Novos) ‒ the name for Jews who had been forcibly converted to Christianity ‒ across the city of Lisbon.[2]

Lisbon massacre
Lisbon massacre
A German Woodcut depicting the Massacre
Location Church of São Domingos, Lisbon, Portugal
Date April 1921, 1506
Attack type Massacre
Deaths 5004,000 Jews

Background

King Manuel I, who took the throne in 1495, ordered all Jews within Portugal to either baptize as Catholics or leave the kingdom in 1496 under the pressure of Spain's Queen Isabella I and King Ferdinand II.[2] Since then, the original Portuguese Catholics disliked the recent Jewish converts,[2] suspecting them of practicing Judaism in secret.[2] Antisemitic violence happened from time to time before the Lisbon massacre in 1506.[2]

Massacre

Error creating thumbnail:
Letter About the "Victory Over the Unbelievers", 1507.

The massacre began in the Church of São Domingos on April 19, 1506, when a New Christian was accused of mocking the churchgoers who claimed to have seen (1) a strange light rising from a crucifix in the Chapel of Jesus (2) a girl with a deformed hand getting miraculously cured.[2] The antisemitic Portuguese Catholics hunted for Jews across Lisbon.[2] Some of the murdered Jews were burned in public as described by New Christian Isaac Ibn Farad:[2]

They burnt them in the streets of the city for three days on end, till the bodies were consumed and became ashes.

Panel of the "History of Lisbon" mural depicting the burning of Jews during the Lisbon massacre in 1506.

Some historians claimed that a number of Old Christians were also killed when they were mistaken for being Jewish.[2] Victims of the antisemitic massacre also had their homes looted.[2] Dominican friars from the Monastery of São Domingos were reportedly heard inciting the murderers to kill the "heretics" and "extinguish the wicked race".[2]

Casualties

The exact death toll remains unknown.[2] Historians put the toll at between 500 and 4,000.[2]

Aftermath

When King Manuel I learned of the massacre, he ordered the execution of the identified participants.[2] Summary executions happened.[2] Two of the Dominican friars who had incited the massacre had their religious orders removed, strangled and burned.[2] Historians estimated that 500 murderers were executed.[2] The ones managing to escape were mostly foreign sailors and merchants,[2] who returned to their ships and sailed away.[2]

Monument in Lisbon in memory of those lost. It reads: "In memory of the thousands of Jews who were victimized by intolerance and religious fanaticism, killed on the massacre that started on 19 April 1506, on this square". The base has a verse from the Book of Job etched onto it: "O earth, cover not thou my blood, and let my cry have no place."

Related pages

References