Because around that time being a Jews were considered heretics and would be thought of as helpers of the devil. They would then torture them, without spilling blood until they died or confessed. Once confessed they burned then at the stake as they thought the more pain it would cleanse their soul and they could go to heaven.
The Moors and the Jews were expelled from Spain and Portugal in the 1490s.
Jews had to leave their homes like they eventually had to leave everything.
They came to Spain during the Roman Diaspora period.
to get money
The relationship between Moors and Jews in Spain 1492 is that both groups were persecuted by the Spanish Christians. During the Spanish Inquisition, the ruling classes and the Church seized upon the concept of "purity of blood" and used this concept to persecute Moors and Jews who had not converted to Christianity. During this time most Jews and Moors were stripped of their possessions and expelled from Spain.
because..................
They were expelled from the kingdom!
It threw them out in 1492. The Catholics had pushed the last Muslims out of Spain in January 1492. They then gave the Jews until the end of July to leave Spain.
Spain
She made The Jews became catholic or made them leave the country
She made The Jews became catholic or made them leave the country
Yes, but not as an exclusive option. The Edict of 1492 stated that the Jews of Spain could (1) convert to Catholicism, (2) flee from Spain, or (3) be summarily executed by the state.
Because the Muslim who conquered Spain in 711were tolerant of both Jews and christian. so the Jews can flourish in Spain and developing their culture, so Jews didn't have to worry about begging prececuted.
The surname Villeda came from Spain. It is Sephardic, meaning it is a surname used by descendants of Jews who lived in Spain and Portugal before 1492. In that year, the king and queen of Spain required that the Jews convert to Christianity or to leave Spain. Many left and scattered throughout the Mediterranean area, to the Netherlands and other parts of northern Europe, and to the American colonies of Spain and eventually to North America as well.
They were expelled from the kingdom, unless they converted to Christianity.
They did not need to flee. Spain was never occupied, nor did it have to surrender its Jews.
Solomon Katz has written: 'The Jews in the Visigothic and Frankish Kingdoms of Spain and Gaul' -- subject(s): Jews in Gaul, Jews in Spain, Jews, History