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Jews, Regalian Rights, And The Constitution In Medieval France
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 15 October 2009
Extract
It is fashionable to imagine a great dichotomy between the feudal monarchies in the West and the brittle, particularistic entity of the Holy Roman Empire of the German Nation. To Voltaire's mean-spirited gibe that the latter was neither holy, Roman, nor an Empire might be added that it was also not really German, since millions of Netherlanders, Italians, and Slavs, as well as Provencals and Savoyards, lived within its territorial limits. France and England, the stereotype goes, had achieved a precocious unity, at least in the thirteenth century. Nothing could be clearer, one might conclude, than the contrast between the great kingdoms of the West and the so-called Empire. The fashionable cliche even affects our understanding of Jewish life in the Middle Ages. Fritz Backhaus put the commonplace this way: “The territorial division (Zersplitterung) of Germany prevented a comprehensive expulsion [of the Jews] as could be carried out in England, France, and Spain.” This neat dichotomy is inadequate. At best it makes sense in a comparison between England and Germany. Only in England, a few exceptions aside, were the claims of a paramount lord, the king, to the control and exploitation of the Jews more or less uncontested by other secular authorities or by ecclesiastics in the role of secular lords.
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References
1. A very early version of this paper was presented at the Twenty-fourth Annual Conference of the Association for Jewish Studies (December 14, 1992) under the title, “The Supremacy of the Crown and the Public Good: The Expulsion of the Jews from France (1306) as an Episode in Constitutional History.” At the kind invitation of Professor John Moore, I gave a lecture at Hofstra University, October 26, 1994, based on a revised version of that paper.
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3. The best survey of the English situation, from which the information to be summarized comes, is Richardson's, H.G. English Jewry under the Angevin Kings (London, 1960). A new synthesis, by Robert Stacey, is on the horizon.Google Scholar
4. The summary of the situation in France is abstracted from my French Monarchy and the Jews from Philip Augustus to the Last Capetians (Philadelphia, 1989).
5. In a paper presented at Cornell University, November 4,1990, entitled, “Jews in Medieval England and France: The Jurisdictional Contrast.”;
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16. For a full discussion of all the issues surrounding the ordinances and negotiations of 1223, see Ibid., pp. 93–104.
17. This does not mean that the status that the Ordinance of Melun defines for the Jews was as radical a departure as the constitutional aspects of the Ordinance; cf. Dahan, Gilbert, Les Intellectuels Chretiens et lesjuifs au moyen age (Paris, 1990), p. 67Google Scholar
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25. The works of Elizabeth Brown continuously propound this message. See, for example, Customary Aids and Royal Finance in Capetian France (Cambridge, Mass., 1992), pp. 223–224; and “Royal Commissioners and Grants of Privilege in Philip the Fair's France: Pierre de Latilli, Raoul de Breuilli, and the Ordonnance for the Senelschalsy of Toulouse and Albi of 1299,”; Francia 13(1985): 151–190.
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29. Strayer, Reign of Philip the Fair, p. 396
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37. Strayer, Reign of Philip the Fair, pp. 396–397
38. Ibid. p. 396.
39. The readmission and the conditions surrounding readmission are treated at length in Jordan, William, “Aliens, Sojourners, Enemies: The Jews in the Kingdom of France,” in The Stranger in Medieval Society (Minneapolis, 1998).Google Scholar
40. The classic study is that of Marc Bloch, Rois et serfs (Paris, 1920).
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