Online Encyclopedia

GHETTO

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V11, Page 921 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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GHETTO  , formerly the

street or quarter of a city in which Jews were compelled to live, enclosed by walls and gates which were locked each
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night . The
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term is now used loosely of any locality. in a city or country where Jews congregate . The derivation of the word is doubtful . In documents of the 11th century the Jew-quarters in Venice and Salerno are styled "
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Judaea " or " Judacaria." At Capua in 1375 there was a place called
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San Nicolo ad Judaicam, and later elsewhere a quarter San Martino ad, Judaicam . Hence it has been suggested Judaicam became
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Italian Giudeica and thence became corrupted into ghetto . Another theory traces it to " gietto," the
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common foundry at Venice near which was the first Jews' quarters of that city . More probably the word is an abbreviation of Italian borghetto diminutive of borgo a " borough." The earliest
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regular ghettos were established in Italy in the 11th century, though Prague is said to have had one in the previous century . The ghetto at Rome was instituted by Paul IV. in 1556 . It
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lay between the Via del Pianto and Ponte del Quattro Capi, and comprised a few narrow and filthy streets . It lay so low that it was yearly flooded by the Tiber . The Jews had to sue annually for permission to live there, and paid a yearly tax for the
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privilege . This formality and tax survived till r85o .

During three centuries there were

constant changes in the oppressive regulations imposed upon the Jews by the popes . In 1814
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Pius VII. allowed a few Jews to live outside the ghetto, and in 1847 Pius IX. decided to destroy the gates and walls, but public opinion hindered him from carrying out his plans . In 187o the Jews petitioned Pius IX. to abolish the ghetto; but it was to Victor Emmanuel that this reform was finally due . The walls remained until 1885 . During the
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middle ages the Jews were forbidden to leave the ghetto after sunset when the gates were locked, and they were also imprisoned on Sundays and all Christian
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holy days . Where the ghetto was too small for the carrying on of their trades, a site beyond its wall was granted them as a market, e.g. the Jewish Tandelmarkt at Prague . Within their ghettos the Jews were
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left much to their own devices, and the more important ghettos, such as that at Prague, formed cities within cities, having their own
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town halls and civic officials, hospitals,
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schools and rabbinical courts . Fires were common in ghettos and, owing to the narrowness of the streets, generally very destructive, especially as from fear of
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plunder the Jews themselves closed their gates on such occasions and refused assistance . On the 14th of
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June 1711 a . fire, the largest ever known in Germany, destroyed within twenty-four hours the ghetto at
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Frankfort-on-Main . Other notable ghetto fires are that of Bari in 1030 and Nikolsburg in 1719 . The Jews were frequently expelled from their ghettos, the most notable expulsions being those of Vienna (167o) and Prague (1744-1745) . This latter exile was during the war of the
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Austrian Succession, when Maria Theresa, on the ground that " they were fallen into disgrace," ordered Jews to leave Bohemia .

The empress was, however, induced by the protests of the

powers, especially of England and Holland, to revoke the decree . Meantime the Jews, ignorant of the revocation, petitioned to be allowed to return in payment of a yearly tax . This tax the Bohemian Jews paid until 1846 . The most important ghettos were those at Venice, Frankfort, Prague and Trieste . By the middle of the 19th century the ghetto
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system was moribund, and with the disappearance of the ghetto at Rome in 187o it became obsolete . See D . Philipson, Old
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European Jewries (
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Philadelphia, 1894) Israel Abrahams, Jewish
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Life in the Middle Ages (1896); S . Kahn, article " Ghetto " in Jewish Encyclopedia, v . 652 .

End of Article: GHETTO
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