- Scepter of Judah
The "Scepter of Judah" (Hebrew: "Shebet Yehuda") was a text produced by the Sephardi
historian Solomon Ibn Verga . It first appeared inTurkey in 1553.The work was essentially a comprehensive analysis of sixty-four different
persecution s that theJewish people had suffered since antiquity. Hardly an insular text, it made use ofLatin sources as well. It also had a certainanthropological value, as Ibn Verga discussed thecustoms and practices of Jews in various lands. Ibn Verga also sought to highlight what he felt were the faults of his people, and as such, much of hiscriticism s of the Jews are exaggerated for effect.In many ways the "Scepter of Judah" was the first and most significant work of Jewish
historiography ; it was essentially the first time that such a comprehensive interest had been expressed by the Jews in their past. Ibn Verga sought to clarify the problem of anti-Jewish sentiment, which had manifested itself in the expulsion of the Jews from Spain in 1492. According to the author, the expulsion fromSpain and Jewish exile in general were natural phenomena that were subject to historical forces of causation and explanation. They were not simply "punishment" for thesins of the Jewish people, as had been the time-honored way of explaining such misfortunes.The text posited the view that the hatred of the Jews is a popular inheritance which is passed from
generation to generation. It is occasioned byreligious fanaticism (as had been the case in Spain) and is compounded byenvy andjealousy ; it also stems from a lack ofeducation . Ibn Verga also suggested that there was perhaps too much flaunting of opulence amongst theSephardim ; certain festivities had been too extravagant, which had raised antagonism and jealousy amongstCatholics . Whether this was actually the case is debatable.The "Scepter of Judah" was one of the most popular Jewish history books of all time, perhaps the most popular until the 19th century.
References
* [http://www.jewishencyclopedia.com/view.jsp?artid=55&letter=I&search=Solomon%20Ibn%20Verga Jewish Encyclopedia: Solomon Ibn Verga]
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