- Maghrebi Jews
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Maghrebi Jews
(Magrebim)Interior of El Ghriba synagogue Religion Related ethnic groups Jews
* Maghrebim * Sephardi Jews
* Mizrahi Jews
* Ashkenazi JewsMaghrebi Jews (in Hebrew Maghrebim מַגּרֶבִּים or מַאגרֶבִּים) are Jews who traditionally lived in the Maghreb region of North Africa (al-Maghrib, Arabic for "the west"), established Jewish communities long before the arrival of Jews expelled from Spain; see Alhambra decree. The oldest communities were present by Roman times (in Roman Cyrenaica) as well as in Punic colonies (Carthage).
History
After the dissolution of the Jewish state a great number of Jews were sent by Titus to Mauretania, and many of them settled in Tunis. These settlers were engaged in agriculture, cattle-raising, and trade. They were divided into clans, or tribes, governed by their respective heads, and had to pay the Romans a capitation tax of 2 shekels. Under the dominion of the Romans and (after 429) of the fairly tolerant Vandals, the Jewish inhabitants of Tunis increased and prospered to such a degree that African Church councils deemed it necessary to enact restrictive laws against them. After the overthrow of the Vandals by Belisarius in 534, Justinian I issued his edict of persecution, in which the Jews were classed with the Arians and heathens.[citation needed]
In the seventh century the Jewish population was largely augmented by Spanish Jewish immigrants, who, fleeing from the persecutions of the Visigothic king Sisebut² and his successors, escaped to the Maghreb and settled in the Byzantine cities. Another migration of Iberian Jews took place in 1492, by the Alhambra decree.
See also
- History of the Jews in Algeria
- History of the Jews in Libya
- History of the Jews in Morocco
- History of the Jews in Tunisia
- History of the Jews in Spain
- History of Jews in France
- Jewish ethnic divisions
- Arab Jews
- Sephardi Jews
- Mizrahi Jews
- Berber Jews
- Hebrew
- Judeo-Arabic
- Judeo-Berber
- Ladino
- Haketia
- Jewish exodus from Arab lands
References
² A l'arrivée des Juifs espagnols : Mutation de la communauté. Richard Ayoun.
[1] Jewish encyclopedia.
Categories:- Ethnic groups in Africa
- Mizrahi Jews topics
- Sephardi Jews topics
- Maghreb
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