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Golden Rule

A Wisdom Archive on Golden Rule

Golden Rule

A selection of articles related to Golden Rule

We recommend this article: Golden Rule - 1, and also this: Golden Rule - 2.
Golden Rule, Meta-Golden Rule, Stone Rule

ARTICLES RELATED TO Golden Rule

Golden Rule: Encyclopedia II - Hillel the Elder - His position

According to the Mishnah Hillel went to Jerusalem with the intention of studying Biblical exposition and tradition. The difficulties which Hillel had to overcome in order to be admitted to their school, and the hardships he suffered while pursuing his aim, are told in a touching passage (Talmud, tractate Yoma 35b), the ultimate purpose of which is to show that poverty can not be considered as an obstacle to the study of the Law. Some time later, Hillel succeeded in settling a question concerning the sacrificial ritual in a manner which showe ...

See also:

Hillel the Elder, Hillel the Elder - His position, Hillel the Elder - Hillel and Shammai, Hillel the Elder - The Golden Rule, Hillel the Elder - Love of peace, Hillel the Elder - The study of Torah, Hillel the Elder - Hillel's influence: House of Hillel vs. House of Shammai, Hillel the Elder - Sandwich

Read more here: » Hillel the Elder: Encyclopedia II - Hillel the Elder - His position

Golden Rule: Encyclopedia II - Hillel the Elder - Hillel and Shammai

In the memory of posterity Hillel lived, on the one hand, as the scholar who made the whole contents of the traditional law his own (Soferim xvi. 9), who, in opposition to his colleague, Shammai, generally advocated milder interpretations of Halakha (Jewish law and tradition) and whose disciples stood in like opposition to Shammai's disciples. He was known as the saint and the sage who in his private life and in his dealings with men practised the high virtues of morality and resignation, just as he taught them in his maxims wi ...

See also:

Hillel the Elder, Hillel the Elder - His position, Hillel the Elder - Hillel and Shammai, Hillel the Elder - The Golden Rule, Hillel the Elder - Love of peace, Hillel the Elder - The study of Torah, Hillel the Elder - Hillel's influence: House of Hillel vs. House of Shammai, Hillel the Elder - Sandwich

Read more here: » Hillel the Elder: Encyclopedia II - Hillel the Elder - Hillel and Shammai

Golden Rule: Encyclopedia II - Hillel the Elder - The study of Torah

The many anecdotes according to which Hillel made proselytes, correspond to the third part of his maxim: "Bring men to the Law." A later source (Ab. R. N.) gives the following explanation of the sentence: Hillel stood in the gate of Jerusalem one day and saw the people on their way to work. "How much," he asked, "will you earn to-day?" One said: "A denarius"; the second: "Two denarii." "What will you do with the money?" he inquired. "We will provide for the necessities of life." Then said he to them: "Would you not rather come and make the Torah your possession ...

See also:

Hillel the Elder, Hillel the Elder - His position, Hillel the Elder - Hillel and Shammai, Hillel the Elder - The Golden Rule, Hillel the Elder - Love of peace, Hillel the Elder - The study of Torah, Hillel the Elder - Hillel's influence: House of Hillel vs. House of Shammai, Hillel the Elder - Sandwich

Read more here: » Hillel the Elder: Encyclopedia II - Hillel the Elder - The study of Torah

Golden Rule: Encyclopedia II - Yuan Dynasty - Golden Age of the Yuan

Yuan Dynasty - Establishment of the Yuan. Kublai Khan, a grandson of Genghis Khan, ascended to the Great Khanate, becoming the supreme leader of all Mongol tribes in 1260. He began his reign with great aspirations and self-confidence — in 1264 he moved the capital of the expansive Mongol Empire to Khanbaliq (Dàdū 大都, present-day Beijing), in recently acquired North China. He began his drive against the Southern Song, establishing, in 1271 — eight years prior to Southern conquest — the first foreign dy ...

See also:

Yuan Dynasty, Yuan Dynasty - Birth of the Yuan, Yuan Dynasty - Founding an Empire, Yuan Dynasty - Aspirations to China, Yuan Dynasty - Northern Conquest, Yuan Dynasty - Golden Age of the Yuan, Yuan Dynasty - Establishment of the Yuan, Yuan Dynasty - Early Rule, Yuan Dynasty - Impact, Yuan Dynasty - Downfall of the Yuan, Yuan Dynasty - Civil Unrest, Yuan Dynasty - Loss of China, Yuan Dynasty - Northern Yuan

Read more here: » Yuan Dynasty: Encyclopedia II - Yuan Dynasty - Golden Age of the Yuan

Golden Rule: Encyclopedia II - Haarlem - History of Haarlem

Haarlem - Middle Ages. The oldest mentioning of Haarlem dates from the 8th century. The name comes from "Haarlo-heim", which means 'place, on sand covered with trees, higher than the others'. An 8th century source mentions "ene viertal boerdereien zeijden ene beecke" (Middle Dutch for "Four farms besides a brook") in a place referred to as "Harulahem". The brook was "De Beek", a stream dug from the peat grounds west of the river to the river Spaarne as a drainage canal. Over the centuries the Beek was turned into ...

See also:

Haarlem, Haarlem - History of Haarlem, Haarlem - Middle Ages, Haarlem - Spanish siege, Haarlem - Great fire, Haarlem - Golden Age, Haarlem - French rule, Haarlem - 19th century, Haarlem - 20th century, Haarlem - Religion, Haarlem - Famous buildings and locations, Haarlem - Miscellaneous, Haarlem - Local beer, Haarlem - Harlem Manhattan, Haarlem - Spaarndam

Read more here: » Haarlem: Encyclopedia II - Haarlem - History of Haarlem

Golden Rule: Encyclopedia II - Mushroom poisoning - Symptoms

Serious symptoms do not always occur immediately after eating; often not until the toxin attacks the kidney, from minutes to hours later. In rare cases, symptoms leading to death may not appear for days after eating a poisonous mushroom. Symptoms typically include: Lethargy Headache Dizziness Cold sweat Vomiting Sharp abdominal pains Jaundice Severe diarrhea If treated promptly, death can usually be avoided. Otherwise, with some toxins, death could result within a week or a few ...

See also:

Mushroom poisoning, Mushroom poisoning - No golden rule for safety, Mushroom poisoning - Symptoms, Mushroom poisoning - Poisonous species

Read more here: » Mushroom poisoning: Encyclopedia II - Mushroom poisoning - Symptoms

Golden Rule: Encyclopedia II - LaVeyan Satanism - Philosophy

LaVeyan Satanism - Fundamental individualism. Satanism is often mistaken as being a religion that encourages cruelty and irresponsible behaviour, but LaVey's brand is very different. Central is the idea inherited from Nietzsche that an individual must enforce his own meaning on life and rise above the perceived conformity of the masses. The Satanist is seen as equivalent to Nietzsche's Übermensch; LaVey claimed "Satanists are born, not made" and that "[Satanists] have a disease called independence that ne ...

See also:

LaVeyan Satanism, LaVeyan Satanism - History, LaVeyan Satanism - Organizations, LaVeyan Satanism - Philosophy, LaVeyan Satanism - Fundamental individualism, LaVeyan Satanism - Man's role vis-à-vis nature, LaVeyan Satanism - Sexual Satanism, LaVeyan Satanism - Satanic social planning, LaVeyan Satanism - Satanism and self-transformation, LaVeyan Satanism - The Satanic Golden Rule, LaVeyan Satanism - God In Satanism, LaVeyan Satanism - The nine Satanic statements, LaVeyan Satanism - The eleven Satanic rules of the Earth, LaVeyan Satanism - The nine Satanic sins, LaVeyan Satanism - The Black Mass, LaVeyan Satanism - Criticisms

Read more here: » LaVeyan Satanism: Encyclopedia II - LaVeyan Satanism - Philosophy

Golden Rule: Encyclopedia II - Amber Diceless Roleplaying Game - System

Amber Diceless Roleplaying Game - Attributes. Characters in Amber DRPG are represented by four attributes: Psyche, Strength, Endurance and Warfare. Psyche is used for feats of willpower or magic. Strength is used for feats of strength or unarmed combat. Endurance is used for feats of endurance. Warfare is used f ...

See also:

Amber Diceless Roleplaying Game, Amber Diceless Roleplaying Game - History, Amber Diceless Roleplaying Game - Setting, Amber Diceless Roleplaying Game - System, Amber Diceless Roleplaying Game - Attributes, Amber Diceless Roleplaying Game - Powers, Amber Diceless Roleplaying Game - Artifacts Personal shadows and Constructs, Amber Diceless Roleplaying Game - Stuff, Amber Diceless Roleplaying Game - Conflict resolution, Amber Diceless Roleplaying Game - The Golden Rule, Amber Diceless Roleplaying Game - Trivia

Read more here: » Amber Diceless Roleplaying Game: Encyclopedia II - Amber Diceless Roleplaying Game - System

Golden Rule: Encyclopedia II - Havelock Vetinari - Staying in power

While he is quite as unpopular as his predecessors, unlike them Lord Vetinari is disturbingly sane and still alive. He has achieved this by ensuring that even though all power-wielding groups in the city dislike him, they dislike each other more. He also carefully arranges matters so that a reality which includes him as Patrician is slightly better than one which does not. The Assassins' Guild no longer accepts contracts on the Patrician - he is the only person besides Samuel Vimes to have been taken off the register. He had the highest o ...

See also:

Havelock Vetinari, Havelock Vetinari - Early years, Havelock Vetinari - Rise to power, Havelock Vetinari - Vetinari's golden rule, Havelock Vetinari - Staying in power, Havelock Vetinari - Deposition and restoration, Havelock Vetinari - Notable events during Vetinari's rule, Havelock Vetinari - Appearance habits and miscellaneous, Havelock Vetinari - Bibliography, Havelock Vetinari - Other media

Read more here: » Havelock Vetinari: Encyclopedia II - Havelock Vetinari - Staying in power

Golden Rule: Encyclopedia II - History of the Jews in Spain - Moorish Spain and the Golden Age 711-12th Century

With the victory of Tariq ibn Ziyad in 711, the lives of the Sephardim changed dramatically. In spite of the stigma attached to being dhimmis (non-Moslem members of monotheistic faiths) under Moslem rule, the coming of the Moors was by-and-large welcomed by the Jews of Iberia. Both Moslem and Christian sources tell us that Jews provided valuable aid to the invaders. Once captured, the defense of Cordoba was left in the hands of Jews, and Granada, Málaga, Seville, and Toledo were left to a mixed army of Jews and Moors. The Chro ...

See also:

History of the Jews in Spain, History of the Jews in Spain - Early History Before 300 CE, History of the Jews in Spain - Under the Visigoths 5th Century-711, History of the Jews in Spain - Moorish Spain and the Golden Age 711-12th Century, History of the Jews in Spain - Christian Spain 974-1300, History of the Jews in Spain - Early Rule 974-1085, History of the Jews in Spain - Toleration and Jewish immigration 1085-1212, History of the Jews in Spain - Turning point 1212-1300, History of the Jews in Spain - The Jewish community in 1300, History of the Jews in Spain - Official persecution and massacres 1300-1391, History of the Jews in Spain - Massacres of 1366., History of the Jews in Spain - Anti-Jewish Enactments, History of the Jews in Spain - The Massacre of 1391, History of the Jews in Spain - Forced Conversions and the New Christians 1391-1492, History of the Jews in Spain - Forced conversions, History of the Jews in Spain - Hatred of the New Christians, History of the Jews in Spain - Edict of Expulsion, History of the Jews in Spain - Number of the Exiles, History of the Jews in Spain - Marranos 1492-1858, History of the Jews in Spain - Modern times 1858-, History of the Jews in Spain - External link

Read more here: » History of the Jews in Spain: Encyclopedia II - History of the Jews in Spain - Moorish Spain and the Golden Age 711-12th Century

Golden Rule: Encyclopedia II - History of the Jews in Spain - Under the Visigoths 5th Century-711

Barbaric invasions brought most of the Iberian Peninsula under Visigothic rule by the early fifth century. Other than in their contempt for Catholics, who reminded them of the Romans, the Visigoths did not generally take much of an interest in the religious creeds within their kingdom. It wasn't until 506, when Alaric II (484-507) published his Brevarium Alaricianum (wherein he adopted the ...

See also:

History of the Jews in Spain, History of the Jews in Spain - Early History Before 300 CE, History of the Jews in Spain - Under the Visigoths 5th Century-711, History of the Jews in Spain - Moorish Spain and the Golden Age 711-12th Century, History of the Jews in Spain - Christian Spain 974-1300, History of the Jews in Spain - Early Rule 974-1085, History of the Jews in Spain - Toleration and Jewish immigration 1085-1212, History of the Jews in Spain - Turning point 1212-1300, History of the Jews in Spain - The Jewish community in 1300, History of the Jews in Spain - Official persecution and massacres 1300-1391, History of the Jews in Spain - Massacres of 1366., History of the Jews in Spain - Anti-Jewish Enactments, History of the Jews in Spain - The Massacre of 1391, History of the Jews in Spain - Forced Conversions and the New Christians 1391-1492, History of the Jews in Spain - Forced conversions, History of the Jews in Spain - Hatred of the New Christians, History of the Jews in Spain - Edict of Expulsion, History of the Jews in Spain - Number of the Exiles, History of the Jews in Spain - Marranos 1492-1858, History of the Jews in Spain - Modern times 1858-, History of the Jews in Spain - External link

Read more here: » History of the Jews in Spain: Encyclopedia II - History of the Jews in Spain - Under the Visigoths 5th Century-711

Golden Rule: Encyclopedia II - History of the Jews in Spain - Christian Spain 974-1300

History of the Jews in Spain - Early Rule 974-1085. Christian princes, the counts of Castile and the first kings of Leon, treated the Jews as mercilessly as did the Almohades. In their operations against the Moors they did not spare the Jews, destroying their synagogues and killing their teachers and scholars. Only gradually did the rulers come to realize that, surrounded as they were by powerful enemies, they could not afford to turn the Jews against them. Garcia Fernandez, Count of Castile, in the fuero of Cast ...

See also:

History of the Jews in Spain, History of the Jews in Spain - Early History Before 300 CE, History of the Jews in Spain - Under the Visigoths 5th Century-711, History of the Jews in Spain - Moorish Spain and the Golden Age 711-12th Century, History of the Jews in Spain - Christian Spain 974-1300, History of the Jews in Spain - Early Rule 974-1085, History of the Jews in Spain - Toleration and Jewish immigration 1085-1212, History of the Jews in Spain - Turning point 1212-1300, History of the Jews in Spain - The Jewish community in 1300, History of the Jews in Spain - Official persecution and massacres 1300-1391, History of the Jews in Spain - Massacres of 1366., History of the Jews in Spain - Anti-Jewish Enactments, History of the Jews in Spain - The Massacre of 1391, History of the Jews in Spain - Forced Conversions and the New Christians 1391-1492, History of the Jews in Spain - Forced conversions, History of the Jews in Spain - Hatred of the New Christians, History of the Jews in Spain - Edict of Expulsion, History of the Jews in Spain - Number of the Exiles, History of the Jews in Spain - Marranos 1492-1858, History of the Jews in Spain - Modern times 1858-, History of the Jews in Spain - External link

Read more here: » History of the Jews in Spain: Encyclopedia II - History of the Jews in Spain - Christian Spain 974-1300

Golden Rule: Encyclopedia II - History of India - Early Middle Kingdoms - the golden age

The middle period, especially that associated with the Gupta dynasty, is known as India's Golden Age, a time of unparalleled cultural development. The Kushanas invaded northwestern India about the middle of the 1st century CE, from Central Asia, and founded an empire that eventually stretched from Peshawar to the middle Ganges and, perhaps, as far as the Bay of Bengal. It also included ancient Bactria (in the north of modern Afghanistan) and southern Tajikistan. Their power also extended into Turkestan and helped spread Buddhism to China. In ...

See also:

History of India, History of India - The Paleolithic era, History of India - The Neolithic era, History of India - The Bronze age, History of India - Indus Valley Civilization, History of India - Vedic civilization, History of India - The Mahajanapadas, History of India - The Magadha empire, History of India - Shishunaga dynasty, History of India - Nanda dynasty, History of India - Maurya dynasty, History of India - Shunga dynasty, History of India - Early Middle Kingdoms - the golden age, History of India - Satavahana empire, History of India - Kushan empire, History of India - Gupta dynasty, History of India - Late Middle Kingdoms - the classical age, History of India - Harsha's empire, History of India - The Chalukyas and Pallavas, History of India - Chola empire, History of India - The Pratiharas Palas and Rashtrakutas, History of India - The Rajputs, History of India - The Islamic Sultanates, History of India - Vijayanagar empire, History of India - The Mughal era, History of India - The Maratha confederacy, History of India - The Kingdom of Mysore, History of India - The Punjab, History of India - Company rule, History of India - The British Raj, History of India - The independence movement, History of India - Independent India, History of India - Textbooks and Surveys

Read more here: » History of India: Encyclopedia II - History of India - Early Middle Kingdoms - the golden age

Golden Rule: Encyclopedia II - History of India - The Mughal era

In the early 16th century, descendants of Genghis Khan swept across the Khyber Pass and established the Mughal (Mogul) Dynasty, which lasted for 200 years. The Mughal Empire ruled most of the northern Indian subcontinent from 1526; it went into a slow decline after 1707 and was finally defeated during the War of Independence of 1857. This period marked vast social change in the subcontinent as the Hindu majority were ruled over by the Mughal emperors, some of whom liberally patronized Hindu culture, some of whom destroyed historical temples ...

See also:

History of India, History of India - The Paleolithic era, History of India - The Neolithic era, History of India - The Bronze age, History of India - Indus Valley Civilization, History of India - Vedic civilization, History of India - The Mahajanapadas, History of India - The Magadha empire, History of India - Shishunaga dynasty, History of India - Nanda dynasty, History of India - Maurya dynasty, History of India - Shunga dynasty, History of India - Early Middle Kingdoms - the golden age, History of India - Satavahana empire, History of India - Kushan empire, History of India - Gupta dynasty, History of India - Late Middle Kingdoms - the classical age, History of India - Harsha's empire, History of India - The Chalukyas and Pallavas, History of India - Chola empire, History of India - The Pratiharas Palas and Rashtrakutas, History of India - The Rajputs, History of India - The Islamic Sultanates, History of India - Vijayanagar empire, History of India - The Mughal era, History of India - The Maratha confederacy, History of India - The Kingdom of Mysore, History of India - The Punjab, History of India - Company rule, History of India - The British Raj, History of India - The independence movement, History of India - Independent India, History of India - Textbooks and Surveys

Read more here: » History of India: Encyclopedia II - History of India - The Mughal era

Golden Rule: Encyclopedia II - History of the Netherlands - Pre-history era

The Netherlands have been inhabited since the last ice age; the oldest remnants that have been found are a hundred thousand years old. During the last ice age, the Netherlands had a tundra climate with very scarce vegetation. The first inhabitants were hunter-gatherers that lived during the last ice age. After the end of the ice age, the area was inhabited by various palaeolithic groups. One group even made canoes (Pesse, around 9000 BC) and after that, around 8000 ...

See also:

History of the Netherlands, History of the Netherlands - Pre-history era, History of the Netherlands - Roman era, History of the Netherlands - Holy Roman Empire, History of the Netherlands - Burgundian period, History of the Netherlands - Struggle for independence and the Golden Age, History of the Netherlands - Eighty Years' War, History of the Netherlands - Golden Age, History of the Netherlands - Batavian revolution, History of the Netherlands - Batavian Republic and French rule, History of the Netherlands - Monarchy, History of the Netherlands - 20th century, History of the Netherlands - World War II, History of the Netherlands - Post-war years

Read more here: » History of the Netherlands: Encyclopedia II - History of the Netherlands - Pre-history era

Golden Rule: Encyclopedia II - History of the Netherlands - Roman era

After Julius Caesar conquered Gaul, he conquered Belgium and The Netherlands around the year 58 BC, which made it the northern border of the European mainland. They built the first cities and created the Roman province of Germania Inferior. For most of the area of Roman occupation in the Netherlands, the boundary of the Roman Empire lay along the Rhine. Romans built the first military forts and cities in the Netherlands. The most important of these were Utrecht, Nijmegen, and Maastricht. The northern part of the Netherlands, which was outsid ...

See also:

History of the Netherlands, History of the Netherlands - Pre-history era, History of the Netherlands - Roman era, History of the Netherlands - Holy Roman Empire, History of the Netherlands - Burgundian period, History of the Netherlands - Struggle for independence and the Golden Age, History of the Netherlands - Eighty Years' War, History of the Netherlands - Golden Age, History of the Netherlands - Batavian revolution, History of the Netherlands - Batavian Republic and French rule, History of the Netherlands - Monarchy, History of the Netherlands - 20th century, History of the Netherlands - World War II, History of the Netherlands - Post-war years

Read more here: » History of the Netherlands: Encyclopedia II - History of the Netherlands - Roman era

Golden Rule: Encyclopedia II - History of the Netherlands - Struggle for independence and the Golden Age

History of the Netherlands - Eighty Years' War. For details, see the main Eighty Years' War article. Through inheritance and conquest, all of the Low Countries became possessions of the Habsburg dynasty under Charles V in the 16th century, who united them into one state. The east of the Netherlands was occupied only a few decades before the Dutch struggle for independence. However, in 1548, eight years before his abdication from the throne, Emperor Charles V granted the Seventeen Provin ...

See also:

History of the Netherlands, History of the Netherlands - Pre-history era, History of the Netherlands - Roman era, History of the Netherlands - Holy Roman Empire, History of the Netherlands - Burgundian period, History of the Netherlands - Struggle for independence and the Golden Age, History of the Netherlands - Eighty Years' War, History of the Netherlands - Golden Age, History of the Netherlands - Batavian revolution, History of the Netherlands - Batavian Republic and French rule, History of the Netherlands - Monarchy, History of the Netherlands - 20th century, History of the Netherlands - World War II, History of the Netherlands - Post-war years

Read more here: » History of the Netherlands: Encyclopedia II - History of the Netherlands - Struggle for independence and the Golden Age

Golden Rule: Encyclopedia II - History of the Netherlands - 20th century

Although its army mobilised when World War I broke out in August 1914, the Netherlands remained a neutral country. The German invasion of Belgium that same year led to a large flow of refugees from that country (about 1 million). The country being surrounded by states at war, and with the North Sea unsafe for civilian ships to sail on, food became scarce and was distributed using coupons. With the end of the war in 1918, the situation returned to normalcy. Although both houses of the Dutch parliament were elected by the people, only m ...

See also:

History of the Netherlands, History of the Netherlands - Pre-history era, History of the Netherlands - Roman era, History of the Netherlands - Holy Roman Empire, History of the Netherlands - Burgundian period, History of the Netherlands - Struggle for independence and the Golden Age, History of the Netherlands - Eighty Years' War, History of the Netherlands - Golden Age, History of the Netherlands - Batavian revolution, History of the Netherlands - Batavian Republic and French rule, History of the Netherlands - Monarchy, History of the Netherlands - 20th century, History of the Netherlands - World War II, History of the Netherlands - Post-war years

Read more here: » History of the Netherlands: Encyclopedia II - History of the Netherlands - 20th century

Golden Rule: Encyclopedia II - History of the Jews in Spain - Under the Visigoths 5th Century-711

Barbaric invasions brought most of the Iberian Peninsula under Visigothic rule by the early fifth century. Other than in their contempt for Catholics, who reminded them of the Romans, the Visigoths did not generally take much of an interest in the religious creeds within their kingdom. It wasn't until 506, when Alaric II (484-507) published his Brevarium Alaricianum (wherein he adopted the ...

See also:

History of the Jews in Spain, History of the Jews in Spain - Early History Before 300 CE, History of the Jews in Spain - Under the Visigoths 5th Century-711, History of the Jews in Spain - Moorish Spain and the Golden Age 711-12th Century, History of the Jews in Spain - Christian Spain 974-1300, History of the Jews in Spain - Early Rule 974-1085, History of the Jews in Spain - Toleration and Jewish immigration 1085-1212, History of the Jews in Spain - Turning point 1212-1300, History of the Jews in Spain - The Jewish community in 1300, History of the Jews in Spain - Official persecution and massacres 1300-1391, History of the Jews in Spain - Massacres of 1366., History of the Jews in Spain - Anti-Jewish Enactments, History of the Jews in Spain - The Massacre of 1391, History of the Jews in Spain - Forced Conversions and the New Christians 1391-1492, History of the Jews in Spain - Forced conversions, History of the Jews in Spain - Hatred of the New Christians, History of the Jews in Spain - Edict of Expulsion, History of the Jews in Spain - Number of the Exiles, History of the Jews in Spain - Marranos 1492-1858, History of the Jews in Spain - Modern times 1858-, History of the Jews in Spain - Spain and Israel, History of the Jews in Spain - Modern Jewish community, History of the Jews in Spain - External link

Read more here: » History of the Jews in Spain: Encyclopedia II - History of the Jews in Spain - Under the Visigoths 5th Century-711

Golden Rule: Encyclopedia II - History of the Jews in Spain - Forced Conversions and the New Christians 1391-1492

The year 1391 forms a turning-point in the history of the Spanish Jews. The persecution was the immediate forerunner of the Inquisition, which, ninety years later, was introduced as a means of watching the converted Jews. The number of those who had pretended to embrace Christianity in order to escape death was very large; Jews of Baena, Montoro, Baeza, Ubeda, Andujar, Talavera, Maqueda, Huete, and Molina, and especially of Saragossa, Barbastro, Calatayud, Huesca, and Manresa, had submitted to baptism. Among those baptized were several wealt ...

See also:

History of the Jews in Spain, History of the Jews in Spain - Early History Before 300 CE, History of the Jews in Spain - Under the Visigoths 5th Century-711, History of the Jews in Spain - Moorish Spain and the Golden Age 711-12th Century, History of the Jews in Spain - Christian Spain 974-1300, History of the Jews in Spain - Early Rule 974-1085, History of the Jews in Spain - Toleration and Jewish immigration 1085-1212, History of the Jews in Spain - Turning point 1212-1300, History of the Jews in Spain - The Jewish community in 1300, History of the Jews in Spain - Official persecution and massacres 1300-1391, History of the Jews in Spain - Massacres of 1366., History of the Jews in Spain - Anti-Jewish Enactments, History of the Jews in Spain - The Massacre of 1391, History of the Jews in Spain - Forced Conversions and the New Christians 1391-1492, History of the Jews in Spain - Forced conversions, History of the Jews in Spain - Hatred of the New Christians, History of the Jews in Spain - Edict of Expulsion, History of the Jews in Spain - Number of the Exiles, History of the Jews in Spain - Marranos 1492-1858, History of the Jews in Spain - Modern times 1858-, History of the Jews in Spain - External link

Read more here: » History of the Jews in Spain: Encyclopedia II - History of the Jews in Spain - Forced Conversions and the New Christians 1391-1492

Golden Rule: Encyclopedia II - Haarlem - Religion

The diocese of Haarlem has been a Catholic diocese since 1559 (Dioecesis Harlemensis). The original Catholic cathedral the Sint-Bavo Cathedral at the Grote Markt, is called after the patron saint of Haarlem, Saint Bavo. The first bishop of Haarlem was Nicolaas van Nieuwland (born in 1510). He accepted the position on November 6th, 1561. In 1569 he was advised to resign by the Duke of Alva, because of his reputation fo ...

See also:

Haarlem, Haarlem - History of Haarlem, Haarlem - Middle Ages, Haarlem - Spanish siege, Haarlem - Great fire, Haarlem - Golden Age, Haarlem - French rule, Haarlem - 19th century, Haarlem - 20th century, Haarlem - Religion, Haarlem - Famous buildings and locations, Haarlem - Miscellaneous, Haarlem - Local beer, Haarlem - Harlem Manhattan, Haarlem - Spaarndam

Read more here: » Haarlem: Encyclopedia II - Haarlem - Religion




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