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The Jewish community in Rome is the oldest in Europe, the only one
to have existed continuously for over 2,000 years. This detailed
study of the Jewish banking community in Italy is therefore of
special value and interest. Poliakov's classic account of the rise
and fall of the Jewish bankers is at the same time the story of
medieval finance in general, its decline, and the birth of 'modern'
finance. The author traces the economic and theological implication
of each stage in the ambiguous relationship that developed between
the Jewish money trade and the Holy See. He shows that the
protection enjoyed by the Jews from the Holy See had not only
theological, but also economic roots. The study ends with an
account of the introduction of modern, 'capitalist' techniques and
of the consequent inevitable decline of the Jewish money trade.
The Jewish community in Rome is the oldest in Europe, the only one
to have existed continuously for over 2,000 years. This detailed
study of the Jewish banking community in Italy is therefore of
special value and interest. Poliakov's classic account of the rise
and fall of the Jewish bankers is at the same time the story of
medieval finance in general, its decline, and the birth of 'modern'
finance. The author traces the economic and theological implication
of each stage in the ambiguous relationship that developed between
the Jewish money trade and the Holy See. He shows that the
protection enjoyed by the Jews from the Holy See had not only
theological, but also economic roots. The study ends with an
account of the introduction of modern, 'capitalist' techniques and
of the consequent inevitable decline of the Jewish money trade.
Covering the story of prejudice against Jews from the time of
Christ through the rise of Nazi Germany, "The History of
Anti-Semitism" presents in elegant and thoughtful language a
balanced, careful assessment of this egregious human failing that
is nearly ubiquitous in the history of Europe.
"From Voltaire to Wagner" reviews the period of the European
Enlightenment in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries when
anti-Semitism gradually stopped being an official state policy in
most countries. Highlighting the emancipation of Jews as it spread
across Europe, Poliakov shows how philosophers, statesmen, and some
theologians became concerned with civil rights, yet the
anti-Semitic beliefs of many highly regarded and influential
persons remained a major roadblock to true equality and justice.
The volume ends with the development of racial anti-Semitic
theories bound up in the emerging modern sciences.
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