Kirjasto Kirjasto
Haku

Kurdipedia on suurin monikielinen lähteistä kurdien tietoja!


Search Options





Tarkennettu haku      Näppäimistö


Haku
Tarkennettu haku
Kirjasto
Kurdi nimet
Tapahtumien aikajärjestys
Lähteet
Historie
Käyttäjän Kokoelmat
Aktiviteetit
Etsi Apua?
Julkaisu
Video
Luokitukset
Satunnainen erä!
Lähetä
Send artikkel
Send bilde
Survey
Palautetta
Yhteystiedot
Millaista tietoa tarvitsemme!
Standardit
Käyttöehdot
Tuote Laatu
Työkalut
Noin
Kurdipedia Archivists
Artikkeleita meille!
Lisää Kurdipedia sivustoosi
Lisää / Poista sähköposti
Vierailijat tilastot
Erätilastot
Fonter Kalkulator
Kalenterit Muunnin
Kielet ja murteet sivut
Näppäimistö
Kätevä linkit
Kurdipedia extension for Google Chrome
Cookies
Kielet
کوردیی ناوەڕاست
کرمانجی - کوردیی سەروو
Kurmancî - Kurdîy Serû
هەورامی
Zazakî
English
Française
Deutsch
عربي
فارسی
Türkçe
Nederlands
Svenska
Español
Italiano
עברית
Pусский
Fins
Norsk
日本人
中国的
Հայերեն
Ελληνική
لەکی
Azərbaycanca
Tilini
Kirjaudu sisään
Jäsenyys!
Unohtuiko salasana!
Haku Lähetä Työkalut Kielet Tilini
Tarkennettu haku
Kirjasto
Kurdi nimet
Tapahtumien aikajärjestys
Lähteet
Historie
Käyttäjän Kokoelmat
Aktiviteetit
Etsi Apua?
Julkaisu
Video
Luokitukset
Satunnainen erä!
Send artikkel
Send bilde
Survey
Palautetta
Yhteystiedot
Millaista tietoa tarvitsemme!
Standardit
Käyttöehdot
Tuote Laatu
Noin
Kurdipedia Archivists
Artikkeleita meille!
Lisää Kurdipedia sivustoosi
Lisää / Poista sähköposti
Vierailijat tilastot
Erätilastot
Fonter Kalkulator
Kalenterit Muunnin
Kielet ja murteet sivut
Näppäimistö
Kätevä linkit
Kurdipedia extension for Google Chrome
Cookies
کوردیی ناوەڕاست
کرمانجی - کوردیی سەروو
Kurmancî - Kurdîy Serû
هەورامی
Zazakî
English
Française
Deutsch
عربي
فارسی
Türkçe
Nederlands
Svenska
Español
Italiano
עברית
Pусский
Fins
Norsk
日本人
中国的
Հայերեն
Ελληνική
لەکی
Azərbaycanca
Kirjaudu sisään
Jäsenyys!
Unohtuiko salasana!
        
 kurdipedia.org 2008 - 2024
 Noin
 Satunnainen erä!
 Käyttöehdot
 Kurdipedia Archivists
 Palautetta
 Käyttäjän Kokoelmat
 Tapahtumien aikajärjestys
 Aktiviteetit - Kurdipedia
 Apua
Uusi kohde
Elämäkerta
Sharaf Khan Bidlisi
02-08-2024
شادی ئاکۆیی
Tilastot
Artikkelit
  530,200
Kuvat
  107,402
Kirjat
  19,967
Liittyvät tiedostot
  100,871
Video
  1,470
Kieli
کوردیی ناوەڕاست 
302,827
Kurmancî - Kurdîy Serû 
88,914
هەورامی 
65,832
عربي 
29,215
کرمانجی - کوردیی سەروو 
17,004
فارسی 
8,902
English 
7,400
Türkçe 
3,597
لوڕی 
1,691
Deutsch 
1,479
Pусский 
1,134
Française 
334
Nederlands 
130
Zazakî 
89
Svenska 
62
Հայերեն 
50
Español 
43
Italiano 
43
لەکی 
37
Azərbaycanca 
24
日本人 
19
中国的 
15
עברית 
14
Norsk 
14
Ελληνική 
13
Fins 
12
Polski 
5
Тоҷикӣ 
3
Ozbek 
3
Esperanto 
2
Português 
2
Srpski 
1
Kiswahili سَوَاحِلي 
1
ქართველი 
1
Cebuano 
1
Hrvatski 
1
ترکمانی 
1
Ryhmä
Fins
Kirjasto 
4
Artikkelit 
3
Tilastot ja selvitykset 
1
Elämäkerta 
1
Paikkoja 
1
Kuva ja kuvaus 
1
Kartat 
1
MP3 
323
PDF 
30,442
MP4 
2,394
IMG 
196,392
Kirjasto
Serhildan - Kurdien kansann...
Kirjasto
Layla
Kuva ja kuvaus
Talvimaisema kotiseudultani...
Elämäkerta
Sharaf Khan Bidlisi
The Jews of medieval Iraq and Kurdistan: Surprising insights from Rabbi Benjamin of Tudela’s 12th-century geography
Ryhmä: Artikkelit | Artikkelit kieli: English
Share
Facebook0
Twitter0
Telegram0
LinkedIn0
WhatsApp0
Viber0
SMS0
Facebook Messenger0
E-Mail0
Copy Link0
Sijoitus Kohde
Erinomainen
Erittäin hyvä
Keskimääräinen
Huono
Huono
Lisää kokoelmiin
Kirjoita oma kommenttisi tuote!
Kohdetta historia
Metadata
RSS
Hae Googlella liittyviä kuvia valitun kohteen!
Hae Googlella valitun kohteen!
کوردیی ناوەڕاست0
Kurmancî - Kurdîy Serû0
عربي0
فارسی0
Türkçe0
עברית0
Deutsch0
Español0
Française0
Italiano0
Nederlands0
Svenska0
Ελληνική0
Azərbaycanca0
Cebuano0
Esperanto0
Fins0
Hrvatski0
Kiswahili سَوَاحِلي0
Norsk0
Ozbek0
Polski0
Português0
Pусский0
Srpski0
Тоҷикӣ0
Հայերեն0
ქართველი0
中国的0
日本人0

The Navi Yehezqel Synagogu

The Navi Yehezqel Synagogu
By Jeffrey Haines
During his travels through Europe and the Middle East, the twelfth-century rabbi Benjamin of Tudela stopped in two of the major world capitals of his day — Constantinople and Baghdad. In Constantinople (present-day Istanbul, Turkey), the center of the still-powerful Byzantine Empire, he noted that the local Jews were treated as undesirables and banished outside the protection of the city walls:
No Jews live in the city, for they have been placed behind an inlet of the sea. Their condition is very low. . . the Greeks hate the Jews, good and bad alike, and subject them to great oppression, and beat them in the streets. . . Yet the Jews are rich and good, kindly and charitable, and bear their lot with cheerfulness.
It is a picture that could have found an echo in many of the cities across Europe at the time, where long-held restrictions were rapidly escalating into violence. But as Benjamin’s travelogue suggests, ­­­not all medieval societies were so oppressive towards Jews, and in some places Jews enjoyed considerably more freedom than they did in Christian-ruled lands.
The Jews of Baghdad
When Benjamin reached Baghdad, the center of the ʿAbbasid caliphate, he marveled at how free, comfortable and easy the lives of the Jews were. Rather than the 2,500 Jews who lived on the fringes of Constantinople, Benjamin reports 40,000 living in Baghdad. He writes glowingly of the twenty-eight synagogues which were spread throughout the city and how beautiful and richly decorated they were: “The great synagogue of the Head of the Captivity has columns of marble of various colors overlaid with silver and gold, and on these columns are sentences of the Psalms in golden letters.”
He dwells even more fondly on the respect shown to Jewish officials and institutions by the Muslim caliph, commenting that Muslims of all ranks as well as Jews paid homage to the Exiliarch, the head of the Jewish community, and that Muslims came to pray at the Jewish shrine of the prophet Ezekiel outside of Baghdad, a practice also noted by his contemporary traveler Petachia of Ratisbon. As elated as he was with the wealth and influence of the community, this sense of dignity and civility towards Jews was what stood out to Benjamin as the defining feature of Jewish life in the heart of Islam.
Benjamin’s description of Jewish culture in Baghdad glosses over the real tensions that existed and persecutions that occasionally took place in the city. Though far more generous than Europe in its treatment of Jews, medieval Baghdad also saw violent backlashes and repression against its Jewish community. Writing in the 13th century, the historian Bar Hebraeus describes incidents in Baghdad such as Jews being forced to wear heavy plaques inscribed with chicken claws around their necks to indicate their Jewishness, as well as the massacre of Jews at the hands of a violent mob.
These outbreaks of violence served as a reminder that Jews were still dependent on the goodwill of the dominant culture, no matter how tolerant it might be. Despite this, Baghdad would remain a center of Jewish culture for more than seven hundred years after Benjamin’s visit. Well into the 1920s, British census figures showed that more than a third of the city’s population was Jewish.
The Jews of Kurdistan
But something else about Jews in the Islamic world captivated Benjamin’s imagination just as much: Unlike Europe, where Jewish landholding was comparatively rare and the vast majority of Jews lived in cities and towns, most of the Jews of the Middle East were rural. They particularly thrived in the mountains in the north of the caliphate, in present-day Kurdistan.
Grainy black-and-white photograph showing a man in robe and turban standing next to overgrown stone columns
The Navi Yehezqel Synagogue in Amadiya, a mountain village in Iraqi Kurdistan (modern-day Amedi). Benjamin described Amadiya as a flourishing center of Jewish culture, a claim also supported by Syriac Christian writers. Via Wikimedia Commons.
In comparison to the 40,000 Jews who lived in Baghdad, a major capital, Benjamin mentions that there were 25,000 in Amadiya, encompassing a much smaller town in the mountains and its surroundings, and that Jewish villages stretched for miles across the mountains, “from the province of Amadiya to the province of Gilan, twenty-five days distant.” As with other medieval authors, Benjamin’s numbers are to be taken only very loosely, but other contemporary writers, such as the Muslim geographer al-Muqaddasī, lend support to Benjamin’s general picture of widespread Jewish settlement, commenting that in parts of northern Iraq and western Iran there were more Jews than Christians.
Just as Islamic law permitted Jews to flourish in the cities, the rugged topography of the north created the groundwork for yet another kind of Jewish culture, one which was, in Benjamin’s description, fierce and independent. While Jews were banned from carrying weapons by both Islamic and Christian law, Benjamin claimed that the mountain Jews were known for their prowess in battle and fought alongside, and sometimes against, local Muslim lords. One man bragged to him that although he had been captured and enslaved by the Muslims, they had asked him to convert once they saw his skill as an archer.
While those who lived in the larger settlements paid the regular jizya tax that Islamic law levied on non-Muslims, a few communities lived too high in the mountains to be reached by the tax officials and were known for swift and sudden raids on the lowlands, a pattern attested in other highland settlements of the region by Syriac Christian writers. A Jewish rebellion ten years prior to Benjamin’s arrival remained etched in local memory for its efforts to unite the Jewish mountain settlements in a quixotic attempt to retake Jerusalem – at that time part of the Crusader Kingdom of Jerusalem – and reintroduce Jewish rule to Israel.
.
Lest his readers think that these Jews were uncivilized, Benjamin also notes with interest that they spoke a dialect of Aramaic similar to what he had read in the Targum (Aramaic versions of the Torah) and that they were as learned in Jewish law as their cousins to the south.
In summarizing the lifestyle of the Jews in the mountains, Benjamin simply wrote, “The yoke of the Gentiles is not upon them,” a phrase that captures as much unspoken sentiment and yearning as his descriptions of the wealthy and educated Jews in the lowland cities.
If the Jews of Baghdad had reached heights of culture and respectability unknown in Western Europe, those in the mountain villages held a level of independence that evaded both.
Expanding our vision of Jewish history
The modern historian Salo Baron has famously commented that it is difficult to break out of the habit of telling the story of Jews and the larger society as a “lachrymose history” – in other words, to frame the past as more than the constant series of setbacks, betrayals, and oppression that have so often marked the Jewish experience.
For all its imprecisions, Benjamin of Tudela’s mapping of the Middle Eastern Jewish world offers one alternative to that framing. His lists of numbers and places vividly illustrate that Jews from the regions of present-day Iraq and Kurdistan – now a tiny and understudied part of the Jewish diaspora – were once just as widespread and populous as their Ashkenazi and Sephardic counterparts, spanning a vast area and comprising incredibly different lifestyles and cultures.
Mesopotamia has been the source of many of the enduring contributions of medieval Judaism to the world – from the Talmud to medieval philosophers, astronomers, and historians. But for Benjamin, the communities of Baghdad and present-day Kurdistan represented not just intellectual achievement, but two alternative ways in which Jews could live and thrive in settings far removed from the restrictions of medieval Europe. He could take the stories, if not the society, back to his home in Europe.

Jeffrey Haines is a fifth-year doctoral candidate in the University of Washington’s Department of History, having previously completed a double B.A. in history and classics at the University of Massachusetts Amherst and an M.A. in early Christian studies at the University of Notre Dame. His dissertation, “Mosul’s Hinterland: Village and Monastery in Early Islamic Mesopotamia,” examines the history of the rural, multi-religious communities that flourished on the northern edge of the Islamic caliphate through the lens of Syriac monastic histories. As a graduate fellow in Jewish Studies, he will focus on the folklore and culture of the Jewish villages that have existed side by side with Christians, Muslims, Yezidis, and Zoroastrians in this region for centuries.[1]
Tämä tuote on kirjoitettu (English) kieli, klikkaa kuvaketta avata kohteen alkukielellä!
This item has been written in (English) language, click on icon to open the item in the original language!
Tämä tuote on katsottu 803 kertaa
Kirjoita oma kommenttisi tuote!
HashTag
Lähteet
liittyy kohdetta: 9
Ryhmä: Artikkelit
Artikkelit kieli: English
Asiakirjan Tyyppi: Alkukielellä
Kieli - Murre: Englanti
Maa - Alue: Kurdistan
Publication Type: Born-digital
Technical Metadata
Tuote Laatu: 97%
97%
Lisääjä ( هەژار کامەلا ) on 18-02-2023
Tämä artikkeli on tarkistettu ja julkaistu ( زریان سەرچناری ) 19-02-2023
Tämä kohta on hiljattain päivittänyt ( زریان سەرچناری ) on: 19-02-2023
URL
Tämän tuotteen mukaan Kurdipedia n Standardit ei ole viimeistelty vielä!
Tämä tuote on katsottu 803 kertaa
Attached files - Version
Tyyppi Version Toimittajatunnuksesi
Kuvatiedostoa 1.0.169 KB 18-02-2023 هەژار کامەلاهـ.ک.
Kurdipedia on suurin monikielinen lähteistä kurdien tietoja!
Kuva ja kuvaus
Talvimaisema kotiseudultani, Urmiyesta Itä-Kurdistanista vuonna 2011

Actual
Kirjasto
Serhildan - Kurdien kansannousu Vanissa
01-01-2013
هاوڕێ باخەوان
Serhildan - Kurdien kansannousu Vanissa
Kirjasto
Layla
02-03-2015
هاوڕێ باخەوان
Layla
Kuva ja kuvaus
Talvimaisema kotiseudultani, Urmiyesta Itä-Kurdistanista vuonna 2011
02-03-2015
هاوڕێ باخەوان
Talvimaisema kotiseudultani, Urmiyesta Itä-Kurdistanista vuonna 2011
Elämäkerta
Sharaf Khan Bidlisi
02-08-2024
شادی ئاکۆیی
Sharaf Khan Bidlisi
Uusi kohde
Elämäkerta
Sharaf Khan Bidlisi
02-08-2024
شادی ئاکۆیی
Tilastot
Artikkelit
  530,200
Kuvat
  107,402
Kirjat
  19,967
Liittyvät tiedostot
  100,871
Video
  1,470
Kieli
کوردیی ناوەڕاست 
302,827
Kurmancî - Kurdîy Serû 
88,914
هەورامی 
65,832
عربي 
29,215
کرمانجی - کوردیی سەروو 
17,004
فارسی 
8,902
English 
7,400
Türkçe 
3,597
لوڕی 
1,691
Deutsch 
1,479
Pусский 
1,134
Française 
334
Nederlands 
130
Zazakî 
89
Svenska 
62
Հայերեն 
50
Español 
43
Italiano 
43
لەکی 
37
Azərbaycanca 
24
日本人 
19
中国的 
15
עברית 
14
Norsk 
14
Ελληνική 
13
Fins 
12
Polski 
5
Тоҷикӣ 
3
Ozbek 
3
Esperanto 
2
Português 
2
Srpski 
1
Kiswahili سَوَاحِلي 
1
ქართველი 
1
Cebuano 
1
Hrvatski 
1
ترکمانی 
1
Ryhmä
Fins
Kirjasto 
4
Artikkelit 
3
Tilastot ja selvitykset 
1
Elämäkerta 
1
Paikkoja 
1
Kuva ja kuvaus 
1
Kartat 
1
MP3 
323
PDF 
30,442
MP4 
2,394
IMG 
196,392
Kurdipedia on suurin monikielinen lähteistä kurdien tietoja!
Kuva ja kuvaus
Talvimaisema kotiseudultani, Urmiyesta Itä-Kurdistanista vuonna 2011
Folders
Kirjasto - Maa - Alue - Ulkopuolella Kirjasto - Kirja - Kirjasto - Kieli - Murre - Fins Kirjasto - PDF - ❌ Artikkelit - Kirja - Artikkelit - Kieli - Murre - Fins Kirjasto - Kirja - Kirjasto - Publication Type - Paikkoja - Maa - Alue - Paikkoja - Kaupungit - Erbil

Kurdipedia.org (2008 - 2024) version: 15.75
| Yhteystiedot | CSS3 | HTML5

| Sivu sukupolven aika: 2.688 toinen!