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Frankfurt was one of the most important centers of Jewish life in
central Europe. In 1462, the Frankfurt City Council ordered the
resettlement of the Jews in an especially constructed street,
surrounded by walls and located at the very edge of the city. The
three gates were closed at night, on Sundays, and during Christian
holidays. The Frankfurt Judengasse was the first legally
constructed space of a ghetto in the Holy Roman Empire, and one of
the first in Europe. The economic, demographic, cultural, and
religious significance of this community in the Early Modern era
has been a neglected area of study. The significance of the
Frankfurt community; the great number of sources for the Early
Modern era which are still available despite all the losses; and
the increasing interest in the history of the Jews in Germany since
the 1990s - evident in an array of dissertation projects - almost
inevitably led to the idea of organising a conference to once again
direct attention on the Frankfurt Judengasse. The conference was
organized by Johann Wolfgang Goethe University Frankfurt am Main,
represented by the Centre for Research in Early Modern History,
Culture and Science and the Department of Jewish Studies, as well
as the Frankfurt Jewish Museum, the Judengasse Museum and the Leo
Baeck Institute in Jerusalem. Most of the essays in this collection
were first presented at the May 2004 conference in Frankfurt. The
authors cover a wide spectrum of themes on a great variety of
aspects of Jewish life in the Frankfurt Judengasse, spanning a
broad chronological arc from the Middle Ages to the dissolution of
the Frankfurt Judengasse in the early years of the 19th century.
The essays illustrate, after decades of disinterest on the part of
German scholarship, a revival of Jewish history in the Early Modern
Era, and thus of the Judengasse.
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