April
6
Whether a Jew committed a simple crime like scapegoating or scandalous behavior, or something more serious, like treason or fraud, he faced a complicated judicial situation, caught among the Holy Inquisition, the Florentine judiciary, and the Rabbinical beit din. Exploring some notorious cases, the speakers will demonstrate the inequity and, in many cases, the prejudice, built into the system as they reflect on the nature of justice.
with:
Dr. Alessio Assonitis, Director of The Medici Archive Project
and Dr. Piergabriele Mancuso, Director of the Eugene Grant Research Program on Jewish History and Culture in Early Modern Europe at The Medici Archive Project
Covid-19 Policy:
Note that as of March 7, 2022, Temple Emanu-El will require proof of Covid-19 vaccination + booster, along with valid photo identification. Masks are no longer required but are encouraged and are available to those who request.
Whether a Jew committed a simple crime like scapegoating or scandalous behavior, or something more serious, like treason or fraud, he faced a complicated judicial situation, caught among the Holy Inquisition, the Florentine judiciary, and the Rabbinical beit din. Exploring some notorious cases, the speakers will demonstrate the inequity and, in many cases, the prejudice, built into the system as they reflect on the nature of justice.
with:
Dr. Alessio Assonitis, Director of The Medici Archive Project
and Dr. Piergabriele Mancuso, Director of the Eugene Grant Research Program on Jewish History and Culture in Early Modern Europe at The Medici Archive Project
Covid-19 Policy:
Note that as of March 7, 2022, Temple Emanu-El will require proof of Covid-19 vaccination + booster, along with valid photo identification. Masks are no longer required but are encouraged and are available to those who request.
In 2016, scholars of The Medici Archive Project discovered an enormous cache of letters and drawings, blueprints and account books from Florence’s long-demolished Jewish Ghetto that opened a window into the lives of its former residents. Within months, The Streicker Center began offering programs about what they learned from the material, about the Ghetto and its aristocrats, Italian Jewish mysticism and the role of Jews in Florence’s courtly life during the two centuries that the Medici grand dukes dominated Tuscany.
As they prepare for their 2023 exhibition at Palazzo Pitti in conjunction with the Uffizi Galleries, Medici Archive scholars return in three stand-alone lectures exploring three different facets of Jewish life in late 17th-century Florence.
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