On August 3, 1492 two events of world changing significance brushed up against each other in Spain. Italian-born mariner Christopher Columbus set out from the Atlantic port of Palos on his voyage to discover new trade
routes to the Indies. As his little three ship flotilla
left port it passed several vessels laden with Jews.
Just weeks after Columbus’s patron Their Most Catholic Majesties Queen Isabella I of Castile and Ferdinand II of Aragon, joint monarchs of newly united Spain, had finally expelled
the last of the Moors from Iberia by capturing the fabled city of Grenada earlier that year, they issued the Edict of Alhambra. Isabella,
Columbus’s main sponsor, was fanatically
Catholic and under the influence of the Inquisition.
Jews had lived and thrived as a significant minority in both Islamic and Christian areas of the Iberian
Peninsula Spain for hundreds of
years and going back to Roman
times. But over the previous 200 years, they had come
under increasing pressure in Catholic areas. In more
tolerant Moorish regions, Jews thrived as philosophers, scientists, physicians, statesmen, and money lenders—a profession that
was forbidden to Muslims and Christians alike.
The new decree ordered that the
remaining Jews in the realm to either
convert to Catholicism or leave Spain with four months.
Many Jews did choose baptism,
but they and their decedents, called
Marranos, remained under suspicion
of secretly practicing Judaism and eventually themselves fell under the yoke of the Inquisition.
Jews who would not convert were promised the protection of the monarchs while they disposed
of their assets and were to be to be allowed to depart
unmolested carrying with them their personal
belongings, but no gold or
silver. Forced to sell assets under these conditions, most
Jews received only a fraction of their worth. Others had property seized by
Christians while authorities looked the other way, and many more
had to simply abandon everything.
Many voluntarily sailed before the deadline, mostly to North Africa where tolerant Moors welcomed them. They and their descendants eventually spread over the Muslim world and became known as the Sephardic Jews.
Jews unable to arrange their own
transportation by the deadline were rounded
up and placed on ships that scattered
them across Europe to uncertain fates. Some were given refuge in Portugal on promise of protection. Prince Henry instead robbed and enslaved them.
Many arrived in Italian city
states where some found a begrudging
welcome and others were later massacred. In all an estimated 250,000 Jews were expelled.
Columbus, himself a devout Catholic,
saw nothing wrong with any of this. On
his voyage he stumbled on the islands of the Caribbean
without realizing where he was and returned to Spain declaring that he had claimed the Indies for the monarchy. He was rewarded
with the position of Viceroy over the new lands and the title
of Admiral of the Ocean Sea.
Columbus made more voyages in increasingly desperate attempts to prove that he had actually
found the Orient. He also became a despotic ruler. He was so
cruel to the Native Carib people—nations he essentially wiped from the face of the Earth in a decade—that even the Church
was appalled. He was eventually hauled back to Spain in chains and stripped of his titles
and fortune.
He spent the last few bitter
years of his life trying to regain what he had lost and defending
the increasingly dubious claim that he had reached Asia.
As for Isabella and Ferdinand, they grew wealthy on the gold and silver of
the dispersed Jews.
The Spanish Empire grew fat on gold looted from
the Aztecs and Incas and from new mines of silver and gold worked by Native slaves.
The losers were the displaced Jews and the conquered native peoples of the New World.
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