Abstract
Vincent Ferrer spent much, if not most, of his life in the city and the Kingdom of Valencia. He belonged to the city’s Christian majority and to the kingdom’s Christian minority—a dominant minority, but a minority nonetheless. Muslims constituted a majority of the kingdom’s population through the four-teenth century and perhaps into the fifteenth.1 About any contacts that Vincent might have had with Valencia’s Jews and Muslims during his life’s first decades, there is no surviving information. Nonetheless, as was the case with his efforts at moral reform and peacemaking, Vincent’s proselytizing did not occur in a vacuum. It was part of a longer history.
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Notes
John Boswell, The Royal Treasure. Muslim Communities under the Crown of Aragon in the Fourteenth Century (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1977), 7;
Dolors Bramon, Contra moros i jueus: formació i estratègia d’unes discriminacions al país Valencià (Valencia: Eliseu Climent, 1981), 80–3;
María del Carmen Barceló Torres, Minorías islámicas en el país valenciano. Historia y dialecto (Valencia: Universitat de València-Instituto Hispano-Árabe de Cultura, 1984), 64–70.
Robert I. Burns, Islam under the Crusaders: Colonial Survival in the Thirteenth-Century Kingdom of Valencia (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1973), 147–9;
Eliseo Vidal Beltran, Valencia en la época de Juan I (Valencia: Universidad de Valencia, 1974), 13–4.
James A. Brundage, “Intermarriage between Christians and Jews in Medieval Canon Law,” Jewish History 3 (1988): 26–33.
Robert I. Burns, “Journey from Islam: Incipient Cultural Transition in the Conquered Kingdom of Valencia,” Speculum 35 (1960): 352–3; Hinojosa, “La comunidad hebrea,” 203–4; Riera, “Les llicències reials,” 115–8.
Philippe Wolff, “The 1391 Pogrom in Spain: Social Crisis or Not?” Past & Present 50 (1971): 4–18;
Benzion Netanyahu, The Origins of the Inquisition in Fifteenth Century Spain (New York: Random House, 1995), 127–67.
Mark D. Meyerson, A Jewish Renaissance in Fifteenth-Century Spain (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2004), 22; Vidal, Valencia, 55–7; Bramon, Contra moros i jueus, 58; Hinojosa, Jews of the Kingdom of Valencia, 35.
Maria Teresa Ferrer i Mallol, La frontera amb l’Islam en el segle XIV. Cristians i sarraïns al país Valencià (Barcelona: Institució Milà i Fontanals/Consell Superior de Investigacions Científíques, 1988), 25–9.
Leopoldo Piles Ros, La judería de Valencia: estudio historico, ed. José Ramón Magdalena Nom de Déu (Barcelona: Universitat de Barcelona, 1991), 99–100.
David Nirenberg, “Conversion, Sex, and Segregation: Jews and Christians in Medieval Spain,” American Historical Review 107 (2002): 1081.
Francisca Vendrell de Millás, “La actividad proselitista de San Vicente Ferrer durante el reinado de Fernando I de Aragón,” Sefarad 13 (1953): 89n7, 91–2.
J. V. Niclòs Albarracin, “La disputa religiosa de D. Pedro de Luna con el judío de Tudela D. Shem Tob ibn Shaprut en Pamplona (1379): el context en la vida y predicación de Vicente Ferrer,” Revue des études juives 160 (2001): 409–33.
Shlomo Simonsohn, ed., The Apostolic See and the Jews, 8 vols. (Toronto: Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, 1988–1991), 2:553–4 (September 12, 1395), 554–5 (September 12, 1395).
For a more detailed narrative, see Antonio Pacios López, La Disputa de Tortosa, 2 vols. (Madrid-Barcelona: Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas, 1957), 1:31–84.
Francisca Vendrell de Millás, “La politica proselitista del rey Don Fernando I de Aragón,” Sefarad 10 (1950): 349–55.
On the diminution, see Richard W. Emery, “The Wealth of Perpignan Jewry in the Early Fifteenth Century,” in Les juifs dans l’histoire de France. Premier colloque international de Haïfa, ed. Myriam Yardeni (Leiden: Brill, 1980), 85.
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© 2016 Philip Daileader
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Daileader, P. (2016). Segregation and Conversion. In: Saint Vincent Ferrer, His World and Life. The New Middle Ages. Palgrave Macmillan, New York. https://doi.org/10.1057/9781137532930_6
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