Buscar
 
 
  • Your browser doesn't support JavaScript or it is disabled -- some functions of this site may not work.

Rumania

RUMANIA (Rum. Romania), republic in N.E. Balkan peninsula, S.E. Europa. The territory of present-day Rumania was known as Dacia in antiquity; Jewish tombstones dating from early times have been found there. The Jews may have come as merchants or in other capacities with the Roman legions which garrisoned the country from 101 C.E. Early missionary activity in Dacia may have been due to the existence of Jewish groups there. Later the Khazars dominated parts of Dacia for a short time. The region was close enough to Byzantium for some contact with its Jewry to be assumed. Another wave of Jewish immigrants spread through Walachia (a Rumanian principality founded around 1290) after they had been expelled from Hungary in 1367. In the 16th century some refugees from the Spanish expulsion came to Walachia from the Balkan peninsula. A few served as physicians and even diplomats at the court of the sovereigns of Walachia. Since it was on the trade routes between Poland-Lithuania and the Ottoman Empire many Jewish merchants traveled through Moldavia, the second Rumanian principality (in the northeast), founded in the middle of the 14th century. Some settled there and were favorably received by the rulers of this underpopulated principality. At the beginning of the 16th century there were Jewish communities in several Moldavian towns, such as Jassy, Botosani, Suceava, and Siret. More intensive waves of Jewish immigration resulted from the Chmielnicki massacres (1648–49). From the beginning of the 18th century the Moldavian rulers granted special charters to attract Jews. While still in Poland they were told about the advantages offered (exemption from taxes, ground for prayer houses, ritual baths, and cemeteries). They were invited either to reestablish war-ravaged towns (1761, Suceava) or to enlarge others (1796, Focsani). The newcomers were encouraged by the landowners to found commercial centers, the so-called burgs. Among the privileges offered was the right to be represented on the local council. In some cases they undertook to attract other Jews from over the borders. When two counties of Moldavia were annexed by their neighbors (Bukovina by Austria in 1775 and Bessarabia by Rusia in 1812), the Jews from these countries preferred to move to Rumanian Moldavia, where they were not harassed by the authorities and had both family and business connections. Jewish merchants exported leather, cattle, and corn. Many of the Jews were craftsmen, such as furriers, tailors, bootmakers, tinsmiths, and watchmakers.

From an early date one of the main components of anti-Jewish hatred in Rumania was commercial competition. In 1579 the sovereign of Moldavia, Petru Schiopul (Peter the Lame), ordered the banishment of the Jews on the grounds that they were ruining the merchants. In the Danube harbors it was the Greek and Bulgarian merchants who incited riots against the Jews, especially during Easter. Anti-Jewish excesses which occurred in the neighboring countries often extended to Rumania. In 1652 and 1653 Cossacks invaded Rumania, murdering a great number of Jews in Jassy. Greek Orthodox Christianity also preached intolerance toward Jews and shaped the first codes of law: the Church laws of Moldavia and Walachia in 1640. Both proclaimed the Jews as heretics and forbade all relations with them. With the exception of physicians, Jews were not accepted as witnesses in trials. In the codes of 1746 and 1780 the Jews are scarcely mentioned. On the other hand, the first books of anti-Jewish incitement of a religious character appeared around this time: the "Golden Order" (Jassy, 1771) and "A Challenge to Jews" (Jassy, 1803). For the early history of the other regions which later made up Rumania see Bessarabia, Bukovina, and Transylvania.

Source:
[N.Kr.]
www.heritagefilms.com

Personas relacionadas:
?, Leia (1907-?)
? DE PARKANSKY, Ita Leya (1875-1945)
AYSENGART / EISENGARD / EIZENGARDEN (AISENGARD), Taube o Tuba (Teresa) (1853-1930)
CALIN, Nadejdea "Nadia" (1917-)
CUCEA, Luiza (1970-)
DUBIN, ? (18?-19?)
DUBIN, Abraham (1888-1930)
DUBIN, Gersh Leibe (1884-193?)
ERLICHMAN / EHRLICHMANN (ERLIJMAN), Aron (Angel) (1868-1935)
ERLICHMAN / EHRLICHMANN (ERLIJMAN), Breine (Berta) (1883-?)
[...Mas]

Links:
link Rumania - Comunidad Judia de Rumania

Articulos:
Texto / articulo 01 - Emerging Rumania
Texto / articulo 02 - Communal Institutions
Texto / articulo 03 - Independent Rumania
Texto / articulo 04 - Internal Organization
Texto / articulo 05 - The Struggle for Naturalization
Texto / articulo 06 - Increasing Anti-Semitism
Texto / articulo 07 - Jewish Political Life
Texto / articulo 08 - Social Structure
Texto / articulo 09 - Cultural Life
Texto / articulo 10 - Holocaust Period
Texto / articulo 11 - During the War
Texto / articulo 12 - Jewish Resistance
Texto / articulo 13 - Population
Texto / articulo 14 - The Liquidation of Jewish Organizations
Texto / articulo 15 - Community Life
Texto / articulo 16 - Education
Texto / articulo 17 - Culture
Texto / articulo 18 - Israel-Rumania Relations to the End of the 1960s
Texto / articulo 19 - Contemporary Period 1970-1981
Texto / articulo 20 - 1983-1992
Texto / articulo 21 - The Mid-1990s

 
   Volver   Volver   Home
Para agregar personas o informacion a este arbol por favor deje un mensaje a Ariel Parkansky en Contacto
Este sitio ha sido dise�ado para ser visto en una resolucion de 1024x768 y funciona mejor en Microsoft Internet Explorer