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Jewish Martyrs in the Pagan and Christian Worlds

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CONTRIBUTORS:
  Author Shepkaru, Shmuel
PUBLISHER:
  Cambridge University Press
SERIES TITLE:
 
YEAR: 2005
PUB TYPE: Book (ISBN 0521842816 )
VOLUME/EDITION:
PAGES (INTRO/BODY): 426 p.
SUBJECT(S): Jews -- martyrdom -- history
DISCIPLINE: History
LC NUMBER: None
HTTP:
LANGUAGE: English
PUB ID: 103-430-025 (Last edited on 2006/09/16 23:26:57 GMT-6)
SPONSOR(S):
 
ABSTRACT:
This book presents a linear history of Jewish martyrdom, from the Hellenistic period to the high Middle Ages. Following the chronology of sources, the study challenges the general consensus that martyrdom was an original Hellenisitc Jewish idea. Instead, Jews like Philo and Josephus internalized the idealized Roman concept of voluntary death and presented it as an old Jewish practice. The centrality of self-sacrifice in Christianity further stimulated the development of rabbinic martyrology and the talmudic guidelines for passive martyrdom. However, when forced to choosed between death and conversion in medieval Christendom, Ashkenazic Jews went beyond these guidelines, sacrificing themselves and loved ones. Through death not only did they attempt to prove their religiosity, but also to disprove the religious legitimacy of their Christian persecutors. While martyrs and martyrologies intended to show how Judaisim differed from Christianity, they, in fact, reveal a common mindset. Although the medieval martyrological option was played down during the Holocaust, medieval martyrologies still feature in Ashkenazic prayers of today.
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