The Lisbon massacre started on Sunday, 19 April 1506 in Lisbon when a crowd of churchgoers attacked and killed several people in the congregation whom they suspected were Jews. The violence escalated into a city-wide, Pogrom that killed between 500 and 4,000 "" ( Cristãos-Novos), the name for Jews who had been forcibly converted to Christianity.
The original Christian population resented the recent converts. They were angered by this new source of economic competition and suspected that many of the converts continued to observe the Jewish faith in secret. Despite the king's efforts to maintain the peace, there were occasional outbursts of violence against the New Christians, culminating in the Lisbon massacre in 1506.
When a New Christian ridiculed the claims of a miracle, he was attacked and killed by the father of the girl, according to the account by Gaspar Correia. Then another man intervened and claimed that the murdered New Christian had been killed because he had spoken the truth. This speaker was also murdered and, following this second murder, the enraged throng sought out and put to death all the New Christians who were to be found in the church. The mob spilled out of the church and began killing any New Christians they came across. They built a pyre on the church square and threw the bodies of their victims into the fire. "They burnt them in the streets of the city for three days on end, till the bodies were consumed and became ashes", according to the eyewitness account of the New Christian Isaac Ibn Farad.
Authorities were unable to subdue the mob and more rioters joined, attracted by the opportunities for looting. Violence spread throughout the city. New Christians, regardless of age or sex, were murdered and their homes looted. Even some Old Christians became victims of the mayhem. By Monday evening the violence seemed to have subsided but Dominican friars from the Monastery of São Domingos organized a procession and urged the crowd to kill the "heretics" and "extinguish the wicked race". The rampage continued until Thursday, when a religious procession calling for peace marched through the city and restored order.
Reports of the numbers killed vary from 500 to more than 4,000. Most were New Christians but Old Christians were also murdered. According to Correia, the victims included significant numbers of Old Christians. At least one important royal official, João Rodrigues Mascarenhas, was killed. Mascarenhas, a New Christian and a tax collector, was undoubtedly a focus of public hatred.
The king's retribution was swift and brutal. Participants in the massacre were summarily executed without trial. Two of the Dominican friars who had encouraged the rioters were stripped of their religious orders, strangled, and burnt. Some perpetrators fled the city but were arrested and executed later when they attempted to return. Approximately 500 rioters were executed. The only persons to largely escape justice were the foreign sailors and merchants who returned to the ships with their loot and sailed away.
According to Correia, supposedly many New Christians falsely accused Old Christians who had hidden them during the massacre of having robbed them and the latter were put to death by the Crown's officials.
Manuel also punished the institutions complicit in the massacre. São Domingos Abbey was closed down for eight years and the city of Lisbon lost important privileges, including the expulsion of the city representatives from the Council of the Crown.
Following the massacre, hundreds of New Christians ignored the royal decree forbidding emigration and fled Portugal, while some who remained still felt deep allegiance to the Portuguese monarch.Yosef Hayim Yerushalmi, Elisheva Carlebach: Jewish History and Jewish Memory: Essays in Honor of Yosef Hayim Yerushalmi, 1998, UPNE, , p. 6–7 On 1 March 1507, Manuel issued an edict that legalised the emigration of New Christians from Portugal.
The massacre was widely reported in Europe. Several contemporary accounts have survived, including one by noted historian Gaspar Correia, which was discovered at an auction house in the 1970s.
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