ABSTRACT

Drawing from an equally wide range of sources-sermons, polemical texts, theological treatises, hagiographical and devotional works, and histories-the volume demonstrates the emergence of a profoundly negative image of the Jews that established many of the stereotypes of classic Christian anti-Semitism. The volume, in particular, argues that the essential turning point in relations between Christians and Jews occurred in the eleventh century, especially the early eleventh century when the first wave of persecutions of the Jews took place.

chapter 1|13 pages

Conflicting Accounts

Negotiating a Jewish Space in Medieval Southern Italy, c. 800–1150 CE

chapter 4|17 pages

Heretics and Jews in the Early Eleventh Century

The Writings of Rodulfus Glaber and Ademar of Chabannes

chapter 5|22 pages

Against the Enemies of Christ

The Role of Count Emicho in the Anti-Jewish Violence of the First Crusade 1

chapter 8|14 pages

The Jews in the Golden Legend

chapter 9|15 pages

Anti-Jewish Attitudes in Anglo-Norman Religious Texts

Twelfth and Thirteenth Centuries

chapter 11|27 pages

Jewish Witness, Forced Conversion, and Island Living

John Duns Scotus on Jews and Judaism