Jews in Venice were historically treated with neglect and derision. While the Jews in Venice were not often subject to riots or pogroms, they were not considered Venetian citizens. They were relegated to a small area of the Canaregio district called Ghetto. (It is from this neighborhood that the term "ghetto" to refer to a Jewish district in a city.)
After the Risorgimento (Italian Unification), Jews in Venice were given some rights, but significantly less than Catholic Italians. During World War II, the small Jewish population of Venice was exterminated. The only Jews left in Venice are incidental inhabitants and tourists, who are treated relatively well.
badly as they were often spat on and shouted at.
Jews in Venice were historically treated with neglect and derision. While the Jews in Venice were not often subject to riots or pogroms, they were not considered Venetian citizens. They were relegated to a small area of the Canaregio district called Ghetto. (It is from this neighborhood that the term "ghetto" to refer to a Jewish district in a city.)
Its origin is the word 'Borghetto", a borough of medieval Venice where most of Venice's Jews lived.
This is a very broad question and it depended where you were. Jews were allowed to live in some locations, although in separate quarters. Jews who had taken Christianity only to avoid persecution in Spain and Portugal and came to Italy, were not always allowed to return to Judiasm, because practicing any faith other than Christianity was also subject to punishment. Then again, Jews were sometimes expelled from locations, such as Naples. Some were allowed to settle in northern Italy. There is a lot of material on line you can research.
because Jews are Jews. All Jews were seen as the same and none were treated more favourably than any others.
nuhtbtybet
They were mainly treated as the same as the Jews were treated.
In the 16th century, Jews thrived economically and took part in the settler movement of Poland.
there was but it was not a popular religion.
Tonkie
James S. Shapiro has written: 'Shakespeare and the Jews' -- subject(s): Jews, History, Judaism in literature, 16th century, Shakespeare, William, 1564-1616, 18th century, 17th century, Characters, Jews in literature, Shakespeare, William, 1564-1616. Merchant of Venice, Shylock (Fictitious character)
17TH CENTURYJews were treated harshly because there were a lot of massacres.Tens of thousands of Jews were killed.Many of thousands of jews were beaten, raped, and were taken down the streets with christiansthe jews were killed just as bad as hitler killed them in 1940.
Lybia
They were treated really badly and they had no respect. some of the Jews were slaves for the Christian's. some or even most of the Jews were executed during that time. There is also some information in THE MERCHANT OF VENICE. the quotes tell us how they were exactly treated and how the Jews might have felt.
I had to study Elizabethan Venice for my English coursework and i couldn't find one thing about it! Everything just came up as William Shakespeare's play 'the merchant of Venice' which provided no help at all!!!!!! So here is some advice, there were some wine merchants, blacksmiths in Venice, they were roman catholic and they didn't accept Jews as equal. it is a really hard subject to find out info for, so i understand the pain your going through!
Jews had relatively low status everywhere in the world until after the French Revolution of 1769, and later, the great migration of Jews to America 1880-1920. In 16th Century England, at the time of Shakespeare's birth, Jews had just been allowed into the country by Oliver Cromwell, after a mass expulsion of Jews in 1290. They did not have citizenship status yet, nor did they many rights.
People who were not Jews were treated differently than the Jews in Nazi Germany. Some of the Jews were German citizens but they were treated as Jews.
Its origin is the word 'Borghetto", a borough of medieval Venice where most of Venice's Jews lived.
they are treated really good