Curiel_family

Curiel family

The Curiel family (Dutch: Curiël or also known as: da Costa) is a prominent Sephardi Jewish family.

Quick Facts Curiel קוריאל‎, Current region ...

Until the late 18th century, the family held diplomatic positions for the Portuguese Crown in Hamburg and Amsterdam.[1]

History

The family's origins date back to the 14th century in Curiel de Duero, Castile, Spain.[2][3][4] Part of the Sephardic community in Spain, the Curiel family settled in Coimbra, Portugal after the 1492 Spanish decree that ordered the expulsion of all Jews who refused conversion to Catholicism.[5][6] Abraham Curiel was an eminent physician in Lisbon and ensured that his children practiced Judaism. They were ennobled in 1641 by João IV of Portugal and hold noble titles in Portugal, Spain and the Netherlands. The Curiel family has links to banking and commerce, the arts, literature and politics.[7][8]

In 1647, David Curiel financed the Spanish delegation to the Peace of Westphalia.[9] Many members of the family sponsored Hebrew scholarship and practiced Judaism, either openly or as crypto-Jews.

Hamburg

Historian Jonathan Israel wrote that in the seventeenth century, "the new Hamburg synagogue, a place of worship for some eight hundred Sephardi Jews, was filled with emblems and reminders of the Curiel family. The eternal lamp, the Ner Tamid, was provided by Jacob Curiel, as was the oil for keeping the lamp burning. And also the bimah that stood at the centre of the synagogue, the shelves which lined it being reserved for the use of Jacob and his family."[10]

Amsterdam

Israel wrote that Moses Curiel of Amsterdam was "renowned for his wealth, the prestige he enjoyed among non-Jews (the Stadholder William III stayed at his house for three days during one of his later visits to Amsterdam), and his handsome donations to the Amsterdam Portuguese Synagogue, his name figured constantly in Dutch Jewish community life and synagogue politics for over half a century." He continues: "his opulent residence on the Nieuwe Herengracht, then called the Joden Herengracht, in Amsterdam, testified to the seigneurial grandeur of his life-style and his pretensions to leadership among the Portuguese Jewish 'nation' as the community was known in Holland."[11]

Israel noted that Nathan Curiel possessed a 'medieval illuminated Hebrew Bible of expectational beauty' which his father, Moses Curiel, had purchased from a Spanish Jew from North Africa. According to Israel, this Bible is considered 'the oldest and most venerable item possessed by Dutch Jewry.'[12]

Notable members

See also


References

  1. "Curiel". www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org. Retrieved 2019-11-27.
  2. Samuel, Edgar; England, Jewish Historical Society of (2004). At the end of the earth: essays on the history of the Jews in England and Portugal. Jewish Historical Society of England. ISBN 9780902528376.
  3. "Curiel". www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org. Retrieved 2019-10-30.
  4. "The Curiel Family in 16th-century Portugal". Jewish Historical Society of England. Archived from the original on 2019-10-31. Retrieved 2019-10-31.
  5. Samuel, Edgar; England, Jewish Historical Society of (2004). At the end of the earth: essays on the history of the Jews in England and Portugal. Jewish Historical Society of England. ISBN 9780902528376.
  6. "Ramirez, Lopo - The Spinoza Web". spinozaweb.org. Retrieved 2020-11-30.
  7. "curiel_alonso". dutchrevolt.leiden.edu. Retrieved 2020-11-30.
  8. Roth, Cecil (1975). A History of the Marranos. Arno Press. ISBN 978-0-405-06742-6.
  9. "Curiel, Juan Alfonso - Scholasticon". scholasticon.msh-lse.fr. Retrieved 2020-11-30.

Further reading

  • I. Da Costa, Noble Families Among the Sephardi Jews, (Gordon Press Publishers, 1976), ISBN 0849023491
  • Daniel M. Swetschinski, Reluctant Cosmopolitans: The Portuguese Jews of Seventeenth-century Amsterdam, (Littman Library of Jewish Civilization, 2004), ISBN 1904113125
  • Jonathan Israel, Conflicts of Empires: Spain, the Low Countries and the Struggle for World Supremacy, 1585-1713, (A&C Black, 1997)
  • Israel, Lopo Ramirez (David Curiel) and the Attempt to Establish a Sephardi Community in Antwerp in 1653-1654, (Peeters Publishers, 1994)

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