Voices for Tolerance: Jews in Early Modern Europe

Voices for Tolerance
In an Age of Persecution

on exhibit June 9 - October 30, 2004

Jews in Early Modern Europe

The Jewish people and their faith constituted early modern Europe's most significant minority and non-Christian religious group. Living a separate and at best uneasy existence among their Christian counterparts, Jews frequently experienced torture, expulsion, and death. Among the factors contributing to the European refusal to tolerate the Jews was a series of anti-Jewish myths that associated Jews with the devil and diabolical practices. Despite the Humanist openness to Hebrew learning, the age was characterized by vicious stereotypes and dark fantasies. However, in places like Venice and London (after 1650), where discrimination was moderated, Jewish communities and culture thrived.

Pierre Boaistuau (d. 1566)
Certaine secrete wonders of nature, containing a descriptio[n] of sundry strange things,
seming monstrous in our eyes and judgement, bicause we are not privie to the reasons of them
London, 1569
©
Among the factors contributing to the European refusal to tolerate the Jews was a series of anti-Jewish myths that associated Jews with the devil and diabolical practices. A turbaned Jew is depicted poisoning a well. The fiendish alliance is further suggested by a devil urinating in the same well. The belief that the Jews abducted and ritualistically murdered Christians is illustrated by the image of a child nailed to a cross.


William Shakespeare (1564-1616)
The most excellent Historie of The Merchant of Venice. With the extreame crueltie of Shylocke the Jewe towards the sayd Merchant, in cutting a just pound of his flesh… London, 1600
©


Richard Westall (1765-1836)
Shylock Rebuffing Antonio (1795)
Oil on Canvas, 81.5 x 53.5 cm.
©
Shakespeare's The Merchant of Venice (1600) reflects the anti-Semitism of his age, particularly in the less well-known subtitle that highlights Shylock's Judaism and his inveterate cruelty. Nonetheless there is also a marked ambivalence in Shakespeare's treatment of Shylock. In emphasizing Shylock's humanity, the play gestures toward toleration. By tracing Shylock's inhumanity to his own experience of intolerance, the play suggests the endless cycle of violence brought on by intolerance.

Voices for Tolerance in an Age of Persecution
Exhibition Highlights

Humanists for Peace | The Reformation | The Struggle for Religious Toleration | The Massacre of St. Bartholomew's Day | Jews in Early Modern Europe | The Miseries of Religious War | Ambivalence towards Islam | Encountering Africans | Catholics in England | James I and Religious Toleration | The Puritan Revolution | Ireland | Debating Toleration in the Restoration | "Acts" of Toleration | Voices for Tolerance Amidst Acts of Hate

Exhibition Intro | Visiting the Folger



This page updated September 29, 2004