Feeding the Eternal City - Kenneth Stow

Feeding the Eternal City

Jewish and Christian Butchers in the Roman Ghetto

(Autor)

Buch | Hardcover
288 Seiten
2024
Harvard University Press (Verlag)
978-0-674-29739-5 (ISBN)
47,30 inkl. MwSt
Between 1555 and 1870, papal authorities created legal roadblocks to keep Rome’s ghetto-bound Jews from obtaining kosher meat. But Jewish butchers found ways to circumvent canon law by working with their Christian counterparts. Kenneth Stow describes this complex collaboration, which enabled Jews to maintain their traditions in a hostile city.
A surprising history of interfaith collaboration in the Roman Ghetto, where for three centuries Jewish and Christian butchers worked together to provision the city despite the proscriptions of Church law.

For Rome’s Jewish population, confined to a ghetto between 1555 and 1870, efforts to secure kosher meat were fraught with challenges. The city’s papal authorities viewed kashrut—the Jewish dietary laws—with suspicion, and it was widely believed that kosher meat would contaminate any Christian who consumed it. Supplying kosher provisions entailed circumventing canon law and the institutions that regulated the butchering and sale of meat throughout the city.

Kenneth Stow finds that Jewish butchers collaborated extensively with their Christian counterparts to ensure a supply of kosher meat, regardless of the laws that prohibited such interactions. Jewish butchers sold nonkosher portions of slaughtered animals daily to Christians outside the ghetto, which in turn ensured the affordability of kosher meat. At the same time, Christian butchers also found it profitable to work with Jews, as this enabled them to sell good meat otherwise unavailable at attractive prices. These relationships could be warm and almost intimate, but they could also be rife with anger, deception, and even litigation. Nonetheless, without this close cooperation—and the willingness of authorities to turn a blind eye to it—meat-eating in the ghetto would have been nearly impossible. Only the rise of the secular state in the late nineteenth century brought fundamental change, putting an end to canon law and allowing the kosher meat market to flourish.

A rich social history of food in early modern Rome, Feeding the Eternal City is also a compelling narrative of Jewish life and religious acculturation in the capital of Catholicism.

Kenneth Stow is Professor of Jewish History, Emeritus, at the University of Haifa. He is the author of numerous books, including Theater of Acculturation: The Roman Ghetto in the Sixteenth Century, Alienated Minority: The Jews of Medieval Latin Europe, and the two-volume work The Jews in Rome.

Erscheinungsdatum
Reihe/Serie I Tatti Studies in Italian Renaissance History
Zusatzinfo 6 photos
Verlagsort Cambridge, Mass
Sprache englisch
Maße 156 x 235 mm
Gewicht 577 g
Themenwelt Geisteswissenschaften Geschichte Regional- / Ländergeschichte
Geschichte Teilgebiete der Geschichte Kulturgeschichte
ISBN-10 0-674-29739-3 / 0674297393
ISBN-13 978-0-674-29739-5 / 9780674297395
Zustand Neuware
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