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Competition and cooperation : The ambivalent relationship between Jews and Christians in early modern Germany and Pennsylvania

https://collections.lancasterhistory.org/en/permalink/lhdo22336
Author
Haeberlein, Mark.
Date of Publication
2002.
  1 website  
Responsibility
by Mark Haeberlein and Michaela Schmoelz-Haeberlein.
Author
Haeberlein, Mark.
Place of Publication
Philadelphia, PA
Publisher
Historical Society of Pennsylvania,
Date of Publication
2002.
Notes
This record provides a link to this resource on the publisher's official online repository.
Summary
"One might argue that this act of benevolence between a Jew and his Christian neighbors could have occurred only under the special circumstances of religious freedom and social fluidity that existed on Pennsylvania's postrevolutionary frontier. But recent research shows that such incidents occurred in the Old World as well, even in the settled traditional estate society of the Holy Roman Empire from which Levy's Christian neighbors had come." [from the text]
Subjects
Jews - Pennsylvania
Pennsylvania - Ethnic relations.
Additional Author
Schmoelz-Haeberlein, Michaela.
Contained In
Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography. Volume 126, number 3 (July 2002), p. 409-436Lancaster History Library - Periodical Article905.748 HSP v.126
Websites
Less detail

Jews and anti-semitism in early Pennsylvania

https://collections.lancasterhistory.org/en/permalink/lhdo22335
Author
Pencak, William.
Date of Publication
2002.
  1 website  
Responsibility
by William Pencak.
Author
Pencak, William.
Place of Publication
Philadelphia, PA
Publisher
Historical Society of Pennsylvania,
Date of Publication
2002.
Notes
This record provides a link to this resource on the publisher's official online repository.
Summary
"[T]he Jewish experience in eighteenth-century Pennsylvania illuminates a multitude of topics that shed light on early American as well as Jewish history. The transplantation of European and English Jewish behavior patterns appears in the close connections Jews maintained with each other throughout the Atlantic world, in the diversity of Jewish immigration which encompassed Ashkenazi and Sephardic Jews from an astounding range of places in the Christian and Islamic worlds, and in the assimilation of elite Jews into an Enlightenment culture that transcended national boundaries." [from the text]
Subjects
Antisemitism - Pennsylvania
Jews - Pennsylvania
Pennsylvania - Ethnic relations.
Contained In
Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography. Volume 126, number 3 (July 2002), p. 365-408Lancaster History Library - Periodical Article905.748 HSP v.126
Websites
Less detail