z 380 stránek
Titul
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Obsah
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Úvodní studie
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Introductory study
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Písemné prameny
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Hmotné prameny
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Ediční poznámka
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Zkratky archivů, archivních fondů
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Zkratky edičních řad a periodik
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Seznam užívaných text. zkratek
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Seznam pramenů a literatury
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Rejstřík jmenný a místní
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- s. XXXVII: … Uncovering the history of the Jewish community in medi- eval Bohemia and Moravia is hence enormously complicated by the fact that the absolute…
- s. XXXVII: … attempting to capture the history of the Jewish population in Bohemia and Moravia had to rely on just two uncritical editions of Jewish…
- s. XXXVIII: … of classi- cal German historiography, conceives of the territory of Bohemia and Moravia as part of the Empire. Four years later, a number…
- s. XXXVIII: … any endeavours at writing a history of the Jews in Bohemia and Moravia. It is not a “regesta" edition in the true sense…
- s. XXXVIII: … terri- tory of Austria, where some records naturally also concern Bohemia and Moravia. The absence of a critical edition of written Jewish records…
- s. XXXIX: … the territory of the entire Empire, including the territory of Bohemia and Moravia and the adjacent lands of the Bohemian Crown, whereas the…
- s. XL: … aware also of foreign contacts of the Jewish communities in Bohemia and Moravia. He inserted in his otherwise embellished or entirely fabricated texts…
- s. XLI: … the history of the Jews outside of the territory of Bohemia and Moravia (for instance the fates of the Jews in Palestine during…
- s. XLV: … European sovereigns: in Hungary (1251, 1256 by Béla IV),“ in Bohemia and Moravia (1262 and 1268 by Přemysl Otakar II) and in Poland…
- s. XLVI: … This is supported by the circumstance that the Jews in Bohemia and Moravia were never considered as imperial subjects, but remained at all…
- s. XLVI: … Iura civium et montanorum (Nr. 49, 50). Some towns in Bohemia and Moravia, as well as in neighbouring lands, soon sought to emulate…
- s. LI: … of Jewish settlers in Brno into the city administration." In Bohemia and Moravia, we are so far lacking convincing evidence of the use…
- s. LII: … prism of preserved documents, it seems that the situation in Bohemia and Moravia was not very different from the surrounding lands. This is…
- s. LV: … Cheb (Nr. 246�254). The expulsion of Jews from towns in Bohemia and Moravia is not confirmed by evidence for the period up to…
- s. LVIII: … the practice of tax collection in the Jewish communities in Bohemia and Moravia functioned very similarly as in Wroclaw. In the entries in…
- s. LXVIII: … seems to be imprecise. The history of the Jews in Bohemia and Moravia comprises a significant component of Bohemian and Moravian history. The…
- s. LXVIII: … analytical study of the life and status of Jews in Bohemia and Moravia in comparison with the situation in other Central European countries.…
Název:
Archiv český XLI. Prameny k dějinám Židů v Čechách a na Moravě ve středověku : od počátků do roku 1347
Autor:
Blechová, Lenka; Doležalová, Eva; Musílek, Martin; Zachová, Jana
Rok vydání:
2015
Místo vydání:
Praha
Česká národní bibliografie:
Počet stran celkem:
380
Obsah:
- I: Titul
- V: Obsah
- VII: Úvodní studie
- XXXVII: Introductory study
- 1: Písemné prameny
- 209: Hmotné prameny
- 225: Ediční poznámka
- 229: Zkratky archivů, archivních fondů
- 230: Zkratky edičních řad a periodik
- 231: Seznam užívaných text. zkratek
- 233: Seznam pramenů a literatury
- 275: Rejstřík jmenný a místní
- 305: Rejstřík věcný
Strana LVIII
Prameny k dějinám Židů v Čechách a na Moravě ve středověku
for four years in advance." The record names individual people with the precise amount
they have paid to the royal chamber in the four-year period. It is essential that the paid
amount was not the same for all people, but fluctuated from a pair of groschen to several
threescore. The Wroclaw records hence tell us a number of important facts. The amount
of tax paid by Jews, as with Christians, was with greatest likelihood derived from the
amount of property owned. As with medieval Christian society, individual Jewish commu-
nities were also hie rarchical and structured according to property. Besides wealthy lenders
whose connections reached all the way to the sovereign’s court, there was also a whole
range of community members of medium wealth or small craftsmen and tradesmen, who
paid considerably lower amounts of the Jewish tax than their wealthier coreligionists did.
Although we lack similar evidence from the domestic milieu, we need not doubt that the
practice of tax collection in the Jewish communities in Bohemia and Moravia functioned
very similarly as in Wroclaw.
In the entries in the Saint Paul Form, there is only a single promissory note to a
Jewish financier. It relates to an interest-free loan (atypical for the period) in the amount
of 20 marks, which the Jew Mušlín provided to the royal chamberlain Burchard of
Magdeburg. Muslín was a member of the Prague Jewish community and also the only
person of Jewish origin who could hypothetically be connected through the person of
Burchard of Magdeburg with the mining business in the emerging mining centre of Kutná
Hora.' In several other promissory notes found in the Saint Paul Form, a clause appears
quite commonly allowing a creditor who did not received a payment to date to get the
money back through a loan “at Jews" (in Judea), to the detriment of the debtor, who him-
self took on the payment of interest. In 1287, Bishop Tobiáš of Bechyně borrowed from
an unnamed Prague Jew the sum of 120 marks for the journey to the council in Würzburg
and also left him a silver chalice as collateral (Nr. 71). Similarly the Cistercian monastery
in Sedlec had to pledge unspecified cloister jewels to the Jews at the time of unfavourable
70
economic developments in the land after the death of Premysl Otakar II."
67) CDM VII, Nr. 595, p. 434; CDM VII, Nr. 598, p. 436.
68) He died sometime before 1302, which we discover from a document in which his widow along with his son-in-law
Avigdor and Muslin’s descendants declare that all their claims towards St John’s Hospitallers from Our Lady under the
Chain have been paid back. The document confirms not only to the conclusion of loans with Jewish moneylenders nego-
tiated by the commander of one of the leading orders in Bohemia, but also indicates some other members of the Prague
Jewish community at the beginning of the 14h century, because the witnesses were the Prague Jews Baruch, Vogel, Isaac
and a certain Swargeueranus (RBM II, Nr. 2763, p. 1207).
69) JANAČEK 1972, p. 895; 83, p. 67; LOSERTH ed. 1896, Nr. 63, pp. 64-65, Nr. 10, pp. 341-342, TADRA ed. 1882, Nr. 135,
p. 471.
70) ČELAKOVSKÝ/VOJTÍŠEK 1916, p. 19.
LVIII