Ashkenazi Settlement in Rhineland and its Movement Eastwards Yiddish as the vernacular language of...

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Ashkenazi Settlement in Rhineland and its Movement Eastwards

Yiddish as the vernacular language of Ashkenazi Jews

Yiddish

• Do you speak yiddish?• What yiddish words do you use?• What yiddish words do you know?

Yiddish

• Do you speak yiddish?• What yiddish words do you know?– Cholent – from the Latin calentem (kept warm) –

developed from the Mediterranean cassoulet

Yiddish

• Do you speak yiddish?• What yiddish words do you know?– Cholent – from the Latin calentem (kept warm) –

developed from the Mediterranean cassoulet– Jarmulka – from the Arameic yira malkhah – fear

of the king

Yiddish

• Do you speak yiddish?• What yiddish words do you know?– Cholent – from the Latin calentem (kept warm) –

developed from the Mediterranean cassoulet– Jarmulka – from the Arameic yira malkhah – fear

of the king– Pamelech – slowly – from Slavic pomalu

Yiddish

• Do you speak yiddish?• What yiddish words do you know?– Cholent – from the Latin calentem (kept warm) –

developed from the Mediterranean cassoulet– Jarmulka – from the Arameic yira malkhah – fear

of the king– Pamelech – slowly – from Slavic pomalu– Shlimazel – schelcht (bad in German) mazel (luck

in hebrew)

Yiddish

• Do you speak yiddish?• What yiddish words do you know?– Cholent – from the Latin calentem (kept warm) –

developed from the Mediterranean cassoulet– Jarmulka – from the Arameic yira malkhah – fear of the

king– Pamelech – slowly – from Slavic pomalu– Shlimazel – shelcht („bad“ in German) mazel

• Diminutive suffixes – from Slavic langugages : – Shtetl – Städt (town in German) – Shtetl - Shtetle

Slavic Languages

• Western Slavic Languages: Polish, Slovak, Czech, Sorbian (Lusatian Serbian)

• Eastern Slavic L.: Russian, Belarussian, Ukrainian

• Southern Slavic: Slovene, Serbian, Croatian, Bulgarian

Languages in Europe

Indoeuropean• Roman• German• Slavic• Baltic• Celtic

Ural• Ugrofinnic

Languages in Europe

Indoeuropean• Roman : Spanish,

Portuguese, French, Italian, Romanian, Catalan, Corsican, Lombard, Occitan, Gascon, Sardinian, Sicilian, Venetian, Neapolitan

• German• Slavic• Baltic• Celtic

Ural• Ugrofinnic

Languages in Europe

Indoeuropean• Roman• German: English, German,

Dutch, Norwegian, Danish, Swedish, Icelandic, Faroese, Yiddish

• Slavic• Baltic• Celtic

Ural• Ugrofinnic

Languages in Europe

Indoeuropean• Roman• German• Slavic• Baltic• Celtic: Welsh, Irish, Scottish

Gaelic, Breton

Ural• Ugrofinnic

Languages in Europe

Indoeuropean• Roman• German• Slavic• Baltic• Celtic

Ural• Ugrofinnic: Hungarian,

Estonian, Finish

Hamito - Semitic Languages

Berber• Spoken in parts of Morocco,

Algeria, etc.

Semitic• Arabic• Hebrew• Arameic

National Composition of the Austro-Hungarian Empire

• Multilingualism – rule of cultivated families that were naturally polyglot

• Ten recognized national languages: German, Italian, Magyar, Czech, Polish, Ruthenian, Slovenian, Serbo-Croatian, Romanian – e.g. in Galicia the classroom

instruction was conducted in as many as four languages including yiddish

– Various mixtures esp. in the border zones

• A journalist Charles Rappaport : "I speak ten languages -- all of them in Yiddish."

Yiddish

• Yiddish – West German language, spoken by 4 million people;

• According to some linguists developped from Cerfati (based on medieval French)

• spoken by 4 million people

• Independent litterature in yiddish mainly since the 19th C

• André Ochodlo – Polish singer, sings contemporary yiddish poetry

• Western Germanic language• Some linguists claim its similarities

with Lusatian (Western Slavic language)

Ashkenazi Jews

• Jews in Italy, Northern France (southern France more Sefardi), England, Germany, Bohemia, Poland, Russia etc.

• Ashkenaz = Germany / Central Europe

• In the Middle Ages less developped culture that in islamic Sefarad where Jews were much more tolerated than in Christian areas.

• Jews came to Central Europe as free merchants, mainly through Italy

• Northern France• London• Germany – Rhineland – Mainz,

Worms, Speyer• General litteracy (men and

women, boys since the age of four) in an age when almost everyone was illiterate + knowledge in mathematics, multilingualism

Ashkenazi Jews

• Rhineland – 9th and 10th C.– Jewish merchants from

Italy, France, Spain imported luxury goods from the Oriental countries, Iberian penninsule, Sicily, North Africa spices, incense, silk and brocade

• Mainz (Rhineland) – the oldest Jewish

settlement, since 903– On a crossroad of

important trade routes– Jews expulsed in 1084

but were alowed to come back – the oldest synagogue documented in 1093

Ashkenazi Jews

• Speyer (Rhineland)– Preserved parts of a

medieval synagogue from 1104 – the oldest on the north of the Alps

– Preserved romanesque mikvah from 1128

– Medieval cemetery with 45 tumbs from 12th -15th C

Ashkenazi Jews

• Worms (Rhineland)– A synagogue documented in 1034,

renewed in 1174• Double nave• Part for women added in the 13th c• Model for the synagogues in

Regensburg and in Prague (Alteneueshul)

• Destroyed by Nazis in 1938 and 1942• Renewed in 1958-1961

– The oldest surviving Jewish cemetery in Europe – 60 tumbs from 11th and 12th centuries

– Mikvah – 1185 – modeled after the mikvah in Speyer

– Rashi from Troyes studied here in 1060-1065• Ashkenaz Language = German

Ashkenazi Jews

• 11th and 12th c. – crusades bloody pogroms (Worms, Mainz, Speyer)

• 13th c. – Jews became dependent on the royal power and were gradually isolated from their neighbourhood– „servi camerae regiae“

• 1215 – IV. Lateran Council– Jews have to carry a

special sign– Consistent separation of

Jews and Christians– Jews are not allowed to

own or rent any land– Limited in crafts– Merchants, money

lenders

Ashkenazi Jews

• Since the 13th c. Jews expulsed from England (1290), since the 14th c. From France (1306) and from Germany (1348 – bulbonic plague – practically only the community in Worms renewed) moved Eastward

• Ashkenazi culture is less varied than the Sefardi one – on constant escape they focused rather on Torah = Law than on poetry or philosophy

Prague, Cracow• Both towns first mentioned by a

Jewish merchant Ibrahim Ibn Jakub in the 10th c. (965)

• On important trade routes

Prague– First Jewish settlement around the

Maltese Sq. (synagogue burned in 1142)– First Jewish cemetery around Míšeňská St.– Settlement around the present day

Spanish synagogue since 11th/12th c. (smaller part)

– Larger Jewish settlement around the Alteneueshul since 12th/13th c.

– Ghetto since 1215, separated with walls and gates

– Old-New synagogue (Alteneueshul) – the oldest surviving and functioning synagogue on the North of the Alps – 13th c.

Prague• Otakar II of Bohemia – 1253 –

servi camerae regiae• Charles IV

– Prague became the capital of the Holy Roman Empire in the mid 14th c.

– Nuremberg – pogrom and destruction of the Jewish houses to make place to the church of Our Lady

• 1389 – large pogrom reported by Avigdor Kara

• Hussites– Jan Hus was interested in hebrew

and in Rashi

• Reformation in Germany – Luther - antisemitic

• Bohemian Brethern – Czech reformation – sympathised with Jews, took care of Jewish cemeteries, etc.

• Around 1600 – Maharal, David Gans

• In 1729 the Prague Jewish community with its 12796 inhabitants was the second largest one in Europe after Istanbul

PragueCheb Bible (Eger) • Czech words in hebrew

caracters > Jews here spoke Czech and currently had Czech names

• http://bodleian.thejewishmuseum.org/?page_id=149

Rivka Tiktiner– The first yiddish writer (mameloshn)– Menekhet Rivka (Rivka´s Nurse)

• Ethical treatise for women• Published shortly after 1600 in

Prague and in Cracow• First book by a Jewish woman• Ideal of a religious woman• a vivid picture of the domestic

life of middle-class Ashkenazi Jewish women in the Renaissance

• The book is addressed to “young, inexperienced women”

– Preached to women, daughter of a rabbi – exceptional education

– Simkhes toyre lid – From polish town Tykocin near

Bilalystok– Died in 1550, buried at the Prague

old Jewish cemetery

Cracow• 14th c. : Golden age under

Casimir the Great (in Prague Charles IV) – last ruler from the Piast dynasty– Charles IV and Casimir the Great

made a peace covenant : the Czech king rennounced formally on the Polish crown and Silesia was added to the Bohemian lands since

– Casimir the Great welcomed Jews from the Western Europe

• 1364 founded university (in Prague 1348) – second oldest in the Central Europe

• Kazimierz – Jewish quarter established after

the expulsion of Jews from the town – right behind the town walls

– oldest surviving synagogue dates from the 15th c.

– Jews worked in salt industry – important mines in Wieliczka (in Germany in Halle)

– Jews traditionally worked in wine making (e.g. Rashi) and newly in vodka making

– Jews were musicians, tailors etc.– Jews worked in finance

• http://commonwealth.pl/

Old Synagogue in Kazimierz

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