Introduction
1. Poetry and Politics in the Medieval Caliphate of Cordoba,
950–1150
2. Crossing the Borders of Art and Society: Toledo as a Meeting
Place of Cultures, 1150–1350
3. The Search for Redemption in Safed, 1500–1600
4. The Jews of Venice between Toleration and Expulsion,
1516–1648
5. Reconstructing Sepharad in Istanbul and Salonica, 1492–1600
6. Portuguese Jews in the City of Amsterdam `The Praiseworthy’: The
Formation of the Western Sephardi Diaspora, 1600–1700
Conclusions
Bibliography
Index
Jane S. Gerber is Professor Emerita of History and director of the Institute for Sephardic Studies at the Graduate Center of the City University of New York. She is a past president of the Association for Jewish Studies. She is author of Jewish Society in Fez: 1450–1700 (1980), The Jews of Spain (1992), winner of a National Jewish Book Award, and Sephardic Studies in the University (1995), and editor of The Jews in the Caribbean (also published by the Littman Library). She has been a visiting professor at Harvard, Yale, Columbia, the Hebrew University, the University of Pennsylvania, and the Jewish Theological Seminary, and has lectured widely in the United States and elsewhere. She headed the Advisory Board of the American Sephardi Federation and served on the Academic Advisory Council of the Center for Jewish History and the Academic Board of the Rothberg School of the Hebrew University of Jerusalem.
Reviews'Highly readable and enlightening... Gerber paints an
illuminating picture of a vivid Jewish sub-culture always in
contact with the non-Jewish, Christian and Muslim, surroundings...
Cities of Splendour will be of great value for many scholars and
students of Sephardic and Jewish history.'
Carsten Schapkow, Sephardic Horizons
'This book is a gem. It is an appetizer, the main course, and the
dessert, depending on the reader’s choice and level of knowledge.
There are sufficient footnotes supporting the facts to allow the
serious researcher to go beyond the text... There is something
delicious here for all our readers, and the book will leave you
well informed and satisfied.'Claudia Hagadus Long, Ha Lapid
‘Cities of Splendour weaves a wonderfully rich tapestry of
Sephardic history, and offers, like Gerber’s earlier Jews of Spain,
an accessibly written resource for teaching on a diaspora, whose
self-fashioning in relation to Spain, and to its various diasporic
contexts, was an ever-evolving process.’ Matthias B. Lehmann,
Medieval Encounters
"This is a refreshing, encompassing, and fascinating study, penned
by an experienced and knowledgeable researcher, and supported by a
rich bibliography. It offers a new look and an original
interpretation of the story of Sephardi Jewry from the medieval
period to the eighteenth century. Moreover, the author’s flowing
prose and the book’s careful editing make it a suitable choice for
skilled researchers, as well as for students seeking to study the
chapters of a long and painful history, but one that is also full
of the glory and splendor of one of the most prominent diasporas of
the Jewish people." Nimrod Gaatone, Journal of Modern History
‘This is a refreshing, encompassing, and fascinating study, penned
by an experienced and knowledgeable researcher, and supported by a
rich bibliography. It offers a new look and an original
interpretation of the story of Sephardi Jewry from the medieval
period to the eighteenth century. Moreover, the author’s flowing
prose and the book’s careful editing make it a suitable choice for
skilled researchers, as well as for students seeking to study the
chapters of a long and painful history, but one that is also full
of the glory and splendor of one of the most prominent diasporas of
the Jewish people.’ Nimrod Gaatone, Journal of Modern History
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