Wednesday, June 29, 2016

1517 Safed attacks - during the Ottoman–Mamluk War in 1517


1517 Safed attacks 


The Safed attacks were an incident that took place in Safed soon after the Turkish Ottomans had ousted the Mamluks and takenLevant during the Ottoman–Mamluk War in 1517. At the time the town had roughly 300 Jewish households. The severe blow suffered took place as Mamluks clashed bloodily with the new Ottoman authorities. The view that the riot's impact on the Jews of Safed was severe is contested.[1]
Historians link the event to the general conflict taking place in the country between the incoming Ottoman regime and its opponents and note that the Jews suffered maltreatment during the war. Accounts of the attack against the Jews in Safed were recorded by historian Rabbi Elijah Capsali[2] of Candia, (Crete) and Rabbi Joseph Garson, who was living in Damascus at the time. According to these reports, many Jews were killed and left injured. They were compelled to flee the city and their property was plundered. Scholars debate whether or not the event led to a decline in the Jewish population of Safed, but all agree that a few years later, Jews had re-established a significant presence in the city.
The attack may have been initiated by retreating Mamluk soldiers who accused the Jews of treacherously aiding the Turkish invaders,[3] with Arabs from the surrounding villages joining the melee.[4] [5] Alternatively, the attack occurred during an attempt by local Mamluk sheikhs to reassert their control after being removed from power by the incoming Turks.[6] David suggests that the violence may have erupted after rumors of an Ottoman defeat in Egypt led to clashes between supporters of the old regime and those who backed the newly imposed Turkish authority.[7] [8] Supporters of the deposed Mamluk governor attacked Ottoman officials and after having murdered the Ottoman governor, the mob turned upon the Jews and rampaged through the Jewish quarter,[9] the Jews suffering particular maltreatment.[10]
Many Jews were reportedly killed while others were wounded or had their property pillaged. According to Garson, the Jews were "evicted from their homes, robbed and plundered, and they fled naked to the villages without any provisions."[11] Many subsequently fled the city,[12] but the community was soon rehabilitated with the financial help of Egyptian Jewry.[13]
The Jewish community quickly recovered. The many Jews who had fled and sought refuge in neighbouring villages returned, and within 8 years the community had reestablished itself, exceeding the former level of 300 households.[14] The Ottoman overthrow of the Mamluks brought about important changes. Under the earlier dynasty, Egyptian Jews were guided by their nagid, a rabbi also exercising the functions of a prince-judge. This office was abolished because it represented a potential conflict with the jurisdiction of the hahambaşi or chief rabbi in Istanbul, who represented all Jews in the empire, and who had, via a Jewish officer (kahya), direct access to the sultan and his cabinet, and could raise complaints of injustices visited upon Jewish communities by governors in the provinces or Christians.[15]
See also
References
  1. D. Tamar, "On the Jews of Safed in the Days of the Ottoman Conquest" Cathedra 11 (1979), cited Dan Ben Amos, Dov Noy (eds.),Folktales of the Jews, V. 3 (Tales from Arab Lands), Jewish Publication Society 2011 p.61, n.3: Tamar . .challenges David's conclusion concerning the severity of the riots against the Jews, arguing that the support of the Egyptian Jews saved the community of Safed from destruction'.
  2. Shmuelevitz 1999, p. 15: "Capsali, relying on Jewish informants, was perhaps better informed about what was happening to Jewish communities in remote parts of the Empire. He wrote about Jews suffering in time of war: the pogrom in Safed during Selim I's campaign against the Mamluks for the conquest of Syria, Palestine and Egypt; and preparations for a pogrom against the Jewish community in Cairo on the eve of Selim’s conquest of the city.'
  3. Ben-Ami & Mishal 2000, p. 185: "When the Mamluks realized that the Ottomans were about to conquer Israel in 1516, they accused the Jews of treason and of supporting the new rulers. Before withdrawing, the Mamluk soldiers took revenge by attacking the Jews of Galilee and Safed and looting their property. Naked and destitute, the Jews were forced to hide in the fields."
  4. Finkelstein 1970, p. 407: "While the Jews of Jerusalem were not affected by the Ottoman invasion, those of Safed suffered heavily. The retreating Mameluke forces attacked them and the Arabs of the surrounding villages used the opportunity to set upon the Jews and despoil them. They abandoned everything and fled for their lives to hide in the fields."
  5. Fine 2003, p. 44: "In contrast to the Jews of Jerusalem, who were not adversely affected by the conflict between the Mamluks and the Ottoman Turks in 1516, Safed appears to have suffered considerably. Retreating Mamluks attacked the community, while Arabs in nearby villages exploited the opportunity to do likewise."
  6. Silberman 2001, p. 141: "The bloodiest outbreak occurred in Safed in January 1517, when a mob of local Muslims, inflamed by their former overlords and by rumors of the defeat of the Ottomans in Cairo, led an open rebellion with great bloodshed in an attempt by the now-dispossessed local nobles to reassume control. A crowd of Muslims inflamed by their former overlords murdered the Ottoman governor and plundered the Jewish Quarter, killing or wounding many in the community."
  7. David 1999, p. 62: "These riots occurred when supporters of the Mamluks attacked representatives of the Ottoman regime upon the disseminations of rumors that the Ottoman sultan had suffered defeat at the gates of Cairo."
  8. David 2010, p. 97: "It appears that shortly after the Ottoman conquest in 1517, Safed's Jewish population suffered a severe blow following the dissemination of unfounded reports that the Ottoman sultan had met defeat at the gates of Cairo."
  9. David 1988, p. 90
  10. Schur 1983, p. 41: "התנגשות זו פגעה ביחוד ביהודי העיר.": התפרצות חמורה עוד יותר איראה בצפת. שמועות שוא מסרו על מפלת הסולטאן סלים במצרים, ובעקבות זאת התעורר ההמון המוסלמי בצפת לפעולה. כרוניקה מוסלמית' מתארת את שהתרחש: (ב־24 בינואר 1517) •יחולל ההמון בצפת הרג רב. הסיבה היא שנודע להמון על תבוסת מלך התורכים, והם נשאו נשק והסתובבו בעיר בחפשם אחר התורכים בדי לעשות בהם שפטים, ונקרה בדרכם אחד, והרגוהו. התעוררה מהומה בין התורכים וההמון. מושל העיר העותומאני ברח אל המצודה עם כל האנשים אשר עמו והתבצרו בה״. התנגשות זו פגעה ביחוד ביהודי העיר. תיאורו של אליהו קפשאלי מזכיר תיאורים מאוחרים יותר של ביזות 1834 ו־838ו. וכך הוא מספר: ־ונקלה כבוד ישראל בעיניהם ויאמרו : נרדוף נשינ נחלק שלל. ויעמדו על היהודים אשר בשפיט (צפת) וישפטום במשפטיהם ושפטים עשו בם, ושחתו רחמיהם ועברתם שמרה נצח, וישללו את כל אשר להם, שתו בשמים פיהם ולשונם תהלך בארץ ויאמרו לית דין ולית דיין, וערומים הלכו אותם מבלי מבלי לבוש, ולא השאירו להם מחיה. ורבי׳ מהיהודי׳ השיגה ידם ומהרו והסתירו מנכסיהם במחבואות ובסדקין, ויבואו אחריהם ויחפשו חפץ מחופש... ולא השאירו להם מחיה או כל מאותה ואפי׳ בגדיהם היו פושטים מעליהם, פושטו ואפילו בשוק, ועפעפי היהודים יזלו מים
  11. David 2010, p. 97: "A contemporary Hebrew source described the results of the bloody clash between Mamluk supporters and representatives of the Ottoman authorities; the rioters killed many of Safed's Jews and robbed others and left them destitute. Those who escaped physical harm sought refuge in the nearby villages, "for due to sins it happened that our brethren were evicted from their homes, robbed, and plundered, and they fled naked to the villages, without any provisions."
  12. David 1999, p. 62: "The demographic data noted here must also be examined against the background of outbreaks of anti-Jewish violence shortly after the Ottoman conquest that caused many of Safed's Jews to flee the city in early 1517."
  13. Finkelstein 1970, p. 407: "The Jews of Egypt sent them clothing and more than 3,000 gold florins. Rabbi Nissan Biba, who organized the aid, went to Safed to help rehabilitate the victims, By the time Rabbi Basola arrived in Safed five years after the conquest, the flourishing city showed no signs that it had been sacked but recently. The Ottoman conquest did not affect the size or composition of Jewish Safed. This is attested by the government roll of taxpayers which was prepared in 1525-1526 and which mentions four Jewish quarters: Musta'rabim (130 household), Frank (40), Portuguese (21), North African (33)."
  14. Abraham David,To Come to the Land: Immigration and Settlement in 16th-Century Eretz-Israel,p.97
  15. Mehrdad Kia,Daily Life in the Ottoman Empire,ABC-CLIO, 2011 p.125.
Bibliography
Further reading

8 comments:

  1. The 1834 Safed Arab Pogrom occurred as part of the general rebellion against Muhammad Ali, the Egyptian governor who ran the Ottoman government in Safed and the rest of Israel. During their rampage in Safed that lasted 33 days, the Arabs murdered over 500 Jews, seriously wounded hundreds more and destroyed many homes, synagogues and businesses. Most residents fled penniless to Ein Zetim and other nearby villages. Eventually Ibrahim Pasha sent a contingent of Lebanese Druze who squelched the revolt. A number of the Arab leaders were arrested and hung but the Jews hardly received compensation for all their damaged and stolen property.

    ReplyDelete
  2. 1660 destruction of Safed

    Save
    The 1660 destruction of Safed occurred during the Druze power struggle in Mount Lebanon, at the time of the rule of Ottoman sultan Mehmed IV.[1] [2] [3] [4] The towns of Safed and nearby Tiberias, with substantial Jewish communities, were destroyed in the turmoil.[1] [2] [3] [4] [5] [6] [7] Only a few of the former residents of Safed had returned to the town after the destruction.[6] [7] Sholem considers the 1662 reports about the destruction of Safed as "exaggerated".[8] The community however recovered within several years, whereas Tiberias lay in waste for decades.

    Safed: historical context
    Safed's central role in Jewish life in Galilee declined after the late 16th century, when it had been a major city with a population of 15,000 Jews.[9] By the second half of the seventeenth century Safed still had a majority Jewish community with 200 "houses" and some 4,000 to 5,000 Jewish residents, while about 100 "houses" (multiple family units) in the town were Muslim.[10] The district was under control of Druze emirs from the Maan family until 1660, when the Ottomans sought to regain local control by reorganizing the sanjaks of Safed and Sidon-Beirut into the new province of Sidon.[11] From the 1658 death of Emir Mulhim Ma'n to 1667, a struggle for power between his sons and other Ottoman-backed Druze rulers took place in the region.[12] Mulhim's son Ahmad Maʿn emerged victorious among the Druze, but the Maʿnīs lost control of the area[11] [12] and retreated to the Shuf mountains and Kisrawan.[13] In the second half of the seventeenth century Safed became the capital of the Ottoman sanjak of the same name.

    Year of the destruction
    Adler, Franco and Mendelssohn claim that the destruction of Safed took place in 1660, Mendelssohn writing that the Jews of Safed "had suffered severely" when the city had been destroyed by the Arabs.[1] [3] [4]

    Gershom Scholem places the attack in 1662,[8] and Rappel writes that by 1662 both Safed and Tiberias were destroyed, with only a few of former Safed's Jewish residents to return to the town.[7] A publication by the General Council of the Jewish Community of Palestine states that the Druze of Lebanon raided and destroyed both Safed and Tiberias in 1662, "and the inhabitants fled to the adjacent villages, to Sidon or to Jerusalem".[14]

    Claims of massacre
    Rosanes brings a claim of Safed's Jewish community "utter destruction" in his book "History of the Jews in Turkish realm". Jacob de Haas, in his History of Palestine, asserts the near-total destruction of the Safed Jewish community, claiming that "its community had been massacred in 1660, when the town was destroyed by Arabs, and only one Jew escaped."[2] However, Gershom Scholem writes that the reports of the "utter destruction" of the Jewish community in Safed in this time period "seem greatly exaggerated, and the conclusions based on them are false." He points out that Sabbatai Sevi's mystical movement was active in Safed in 1665. Scholem also attributes to the "French trader d'Arvieux who visited Safed in 1660" an understanding of "the religious factor which enabled the community to survive," a belief "'that the Messiah who will be born in Galilee, will make Safed the capital of his new kingdom on earth'"[8] Scholem wrote that there was definitely a Jewish community in Safed in 1664–1667.[15]

    ReplyDelete
  3. Safed

    Safed is an ancient hill top city seeped in spirituality; it is one of Judaism’s major four holy cities and the center of Jewish mysticism and Kabbalah (even Madonna has been here). The sacred books of the Kabbalah were written here and there are ancient synagogues with unique history and decoration. The old part of the city has winding alleyways lined with stone houses and in the Artist’s Quarter you can see paintings, ceramics, metalwork and jewelry most of which is inspired by the city’s spirituality.

    ReplyDelete
  4. Safed

    This city's name is spelled so many different ways -- Tzefiya (in the Talmud), Safad, Zefat, Sefad -- it's easy to get confused and think they are entirely different places.

    Regardless, if you see any of these on your itinerary, it's a place you'll want to visit.

    At an altitude of 2,790 feet (850 meters), Safed is Israel's highest town and probably its coldest.

    Safed did not become an important center of Jewish life until the late 15th and early 16th centuries. It is not mentioned in the Torah and was apparently not settled until Roman times.

    The Crusaders erected a citadel in the city, which, like most of their other structures, came under the control of the Muslimconqueror Saladin in the late 12th century. The Crusadersreturned a half-century later and built the largest Christian fortress in the East, but that eventually fell to the Mamluks in 1266 under Sultan Beibars, who cut off the heads of the men and sold the women and children into slavery.


    Jews began to come in large numbers after they were expelled from Spain in 1492 (whileColumbus was sailing the ocean blue). The city is most closely associated with Jewish mysticism, the kabbalah, whose foremost exponent, Rabbi Isaac Luria, lived and taught there. Known as "Ha'Ari" (the lion), Luria had come from Egypt in 1569 and died just three years later. The "bible" of the kabbalists, the Zohar, was written by the second-century talmudist Rabbi Shimon bar Yochai, who believed each word and line of the Torah had a higher meaning. The author of the main part of the Zohar was Moses de Leon (12th century) in Spain.

    Besides the kabbalists, Safad also attracted numerous other Jewish scholars and spirtualists, including Joseph Caro, the author of the Shulchan Aruch, Rabbi Moshe Cordovero andSolomon Alkabetz, composer of the Sabbath hymn Lecha Dodi.


    The Jewish community thrived in Safed for more than 400 years before the outbreaks of violence in Palestine provoked many residents to leave. The 1517 and 1635 and 1834-1838 attacks. The 1929 Arab riots stimulated a gradual decline that resulted in the Arabs becoming the majority in the city. When the British withdrew from Palestine in 1948 and handed the Citadel over to the Arabs, the remaining Jewish residents, backed by reinforcements from the Haganah, held off the Arab forces and kept the city a part of the new state of Israel.

    The city is a warren of cobblestone streets that lead to ancient synagogues. In the Caro Synagogue, named after the scholar, the Ark contains a Torah scroll that is at least 400 years old. Many of the doors of buildings in the city are painted blue to remind people of heaven.

    ReplyDelete
  5. Safed massacre

    Save
    Safed massacre relates to several violent events, happened in different time periods in the town of Safed, Galilee (currently under jurisdiction of Israel). Safed massacre may refer to:

    1660 destruction of Safed
    1834 looting of Safed, Safed massacre during 1834 Arab revolt in Palestine
    1838 Druze attack on Safed
    1929 Safed riots, during 1929 Palestine riots
    See also
    History of the Jews and Judaism in the Land of Israel
    Safed

    ReplyDelete
  6. Safed massacre

    Save
    Safed massacre relates to several violent events, happened in different time periods in the town of Safed, Galilee (currently under jurisdiction of Israel). Safed massacre may refer to:

    1660 destruction of Safed
    1834 looting of Safed, Safed massacre during 1834 Arab revolt in Palestine
    1838 Druze attack on Safed
    1929 Safed riots, during 1929 Palestine riots
    See also
    History of the Jews and Judaism in the Land of Israel
    Safed

    ReplyDelete
  7. Safed

    This city's name is spelled so many different ways -- Tzefiya (in the Talmud), Safad, Zefat, Sefad -- it's easy to get confused and think they are entirely different places.

    Regardless, if you see any of these on your itinerary, it's a place you'll want to visit.

    At an altitude of 2,790 feet (850 meters), Safed is Israel's highest town and probably its coldest.

    Safed did not become an important center of Jewish life until the late 15th and early 16th centuries. It is not mentioned in the Torah and was apparently not settled until Roman times.

    The Crusaders erected a citadel in the city, which, like most of their other structures, came under the control of the Muslimconqueror Saladin in the late 12th century. The Crusadersreturned a half-century later and built the largest Christian fortress in the East, but that eventually fell to the Mamluks in 1266 under Sultan Beibars, who cut off the heads of the men and sold the women and children into slavery.


    Jews began to come in large numbers after they were expelled from Spain in 1492 (whileColumbus was sailing the ocean blue). The city is most closely associated with Jewish mysticism, the kabbalah, whose foremost exponent, Rabbi Isaac Luria, lived and taught there. Known as "Ha'Ari" (the lion), Luria had come from Egypt in 1569 and died just three years later. The "bible" of the kabbalists, the Zohar, was written by the second-century talmudist Rabbi Shimon bar Yochai, who believed each word and line of the Torah had a higher meaning. The author of the main part of the Zohar was Moses de Leon (12th century) in Spain.

    Besides the kabbalists, Safad also attracted numerous other Jewish scholars and spirtualists, including Joseph Caro, the author of the Shulchan Aruch, Rabbi Moshe Cordovero andSolomon Alkabetz, composer of the Sabbath hymn Lecha Dodi.


    The Jewish community thrived in Safed for more than 400 years before the outbreaks of violence in Palestine provoked many residents to leave. The 1517 and 1635 and 1834-1838 attacks. The 1929 Arab riots stimulated a gradual decline that resulted in the Arabs becoming the majority in the city. When the British withdrew from Palestine in 1948 and handed the Citadel over to the Arabs, the remaining Jewish residents, backed by reinforcements from the Haganah, held off the Arab forces and kept the city a part of the new state of Israel.

    The city is a warren of cobblestone streets that lead to ancient synagogues. In the Caro Synagogue, named after the scholar, the Ark contains a Torah scroll that is at least 400 years old. Many of the doors of buildings in the city are painted blue to remind people of heaven.

    ReplyDelete
  8. List of massacres in Palestine. For massacres that have occurred in Israel following its declaration of independence, see List of massacres in Israel. For massacres that have occurred in the West Bank and the Gaza Strip since 1948, see List of massacres in Palestinian Territories.

    Palestine is a name, among others, for the geographic region between the Mediterranean Sea and the Jordan River, and various adjoining lands.[1] The region is also known as the Land of Israel and the Holy Land.[2] [3]

    Name Date Location Responsible Party Deaths Notes
    Siege of Jerusalem (614) 614 Jerusalem Persian Amy ordered by Shahrbaraz 66,509[4] Christians were massacred by Persian invaders
    Siege of Jerusalem (1099) 15 July 1099 Jerusalem European Crusaders over 10,000 Muslims, Jews and Christians
    1517 Hebron attacks 1517 Hebron Turkish soldiers Unknown Jews were attacked, beaten, and raped, and many were killed in their homes[5]
    1517 Safed attacks 1517 Safed Muslim mobs Unknown Many Jews subsequently fled the city[6]
    1660 destruction of Tiberias 1660 Tiberias Druze rebels Unknown Resulted in Jewish population abandoning Tiberias[7] [8]
    1660 destruction of Safed 1660 Safed Arab rioters Unknown, estimated thousands[9]
    Siege of Jaffa 7 March 1799 Jaffa Napoleon's Army 2,440-4,100 Ottoman prisoners were executed on the beaches south of the town
    Taking of Hebron by Egypt/ 1834 Hebron massacre 1834 Hebron Egyptian troops Over 500 Egyptian soldiers did not distinguish between inhabitants; for three hours, troops plundered, killed, raped and maimed Muslim and Jew alike.[10]
    1834 looting of Safed 1834 Safed Arab rioters unknown Reports detail torture and mass-rape of Jewish population[11]
    1838 Druze attack on Safed 1838 Safed Druze rebels Unknown Druze rebels and Muslim mobs plundered Jewish quarters for three days[10] [12]
    See also
    For massacres, taking place during Ottoman times, see List of massacres in Ottoman Syria.

    ReplyDelete