Historical Timeline
300 B.C.
400-300 B.C.: Jewish traders enter Iberia
700
711: Muslim forces from North Africa begin their invasion of the Iberian Peninsula, establish beginning of Umayyad rule
711-718: The start of the Golden Age for Jewish culture in Spain; it ends during the 11th century
718: Battle of Covadonga, first victory by Christian Visigoth forces against Muslims, marks the start of the Reconquista
756: The Umayyad dynasty, headed by al-Rahman I, establishes stability, rules with religious tolerance
800
912-961: The Muslim Spanish expansion and cultural influence peaks, Caliphate of Cordoba heads the Umayyads
1000
1031: Umayyad disintegration; Muluk al-tawa’if, an era of fractured rule
1085: Alfonso VI annexes the city of Toledo, which had previously been the capital of the Visigoths, Toledo becomes a stronghold in the fight against the Muslims
1086: The Almoravid dynasty defeats Christian forces, unifies Iberian peninsula again
1094: Spanish cavalryman Rodrigo Diaz de Vivar, often known as El Cid, leads the Castilians to capture Valencia
1100
1146: Almohad dynasty, less religious tolerance than predecessors
1148: Maimonides, Jewish philosopher of Cordoba, flees persecution from Almohads
1200
1252-1284: King Alfonso X, known as Alfonso the Wise, created a cosmopolitan court for learning that encouraged Jews, Muslims, and Christians to serve on
1263: Barcelona disputation, between Dominican Friar Pablo Christiani, convert from Judaism to Christianity, and Nachmanides, a prominent Jewish scholar and commentator. Nachmanides wins.
1290: England expels its full Jewish population
1300
1391: Dominican friars in Seville agitate for riots against Jews, which spread through Spain for the next hundreds of years. About 50 percent of Jews convert to Catholicism in that time.
1400
1414: Disputation of Tortosa, a public debate between Vincent Ferrer, Christian, and Profiat Duran, Jewish, about whether the Messiah had come
1469: Isabella and Ferdinand, Catholic Queen and King, marry and begin uniting Spain
1480: Inquisition established in Seville
1482-1492: Ferdinand and Isabella complete the Reconquista by defeating the armies of Boabdil of Granada
1492: Columbus voyage to New World; same week Jews flee from Spain
1492: The Alhambra Decree by Isabella and Ferdinand orders the expulsion of all Jews from Spain, giving them the choice to convert - half converts. King Joao II of Portugal and Sultan Bayezid II of the Ottoman Empire welcome Spain’s expelled Jews
1496: Manuel I of Portugal forcibly converts all the Jews; they were allowed to practice Judaism privately without retribution
1500
1510: Portuguese military invades Goa
1525 : Spanish military invades Colombia
1532 : Spanish military invades Peru
1536: Inquisition Established in Lisbon, Portugal with forced mass conversions under Manuel I
1540: First auto-da-fé conducted by the Portuguese Inquisition; Jesuit order founded
1565: Spanish colonists invade the Philippines, arriving from Mexico
1570: Inquisition established in Lima, Peru
1571: Inquisition begins in La Ciudad de Mexico
1574: 1st auto-da-fe in Mexico
1579: Luis de Carvajal y de la Cueva, of converso descent, becomes governor of Nuevo Leon under King Philip II
1580: 177 of the 259 original Nuevo Leon settlers are conversos
1581: Iberian Unification under King Philip II
1581: Philip II of Spain assumes throne of Portugal, reinvigoration of Portuguese Inquisition, mass migration of crypto jews to Spain & Spanish holdings in New World
1589: Luis de Carvajal el Mozo, Nephew of Governor, arrested by Inquisition
1589-1596: 200 people arrested in Mexico by Inquisition for Judaizing
1591: Governor Luis de Carvajal y de la Cueva dies
1595: Luis de Carvajal el Mozo arrested by Inquisition 2nd time
1596: Luis de Carvajal el Mozo burned at the stake
1600
1610: Inquisition starts in Cartagena, Colombia
1624: Approximately 50,000 Europeans lived in Brazil, with New Christians making up a significant percentage
1640: Iberian Union breaks up, Portugal regains independence
1654: 23 Jews arrive in New Amsterdam, fleeing persecution in Brazil
1700
1800
1811: Napoleon's new civil code, ensuring religious freedom, prompts Portugal to follow suit
1834: Spanish Queen Maria Cristina de Borbon abolishes Inquisition
1900
1923: After the Greco-Turkish War Turkish Orthodox Christians are expelled to Greece and Greek Muslims to Turkey
1941: Nazi annexation of Greece where Ladino Jews live; 80 percent of Greece’s pre-war Jews were murdered
2000
2015: Spanish parliament approves law granting citizenship to Jews with Sephardic heritage
Please find below some relevant sources relating to key events from the history:
A past exhibition at the New York Historical Society, linked here, chronicling the arrival of the first North American Jewish community to New Amsterdam.
A reflection in the New York Times, linked here, written by the film’s very own Doreen Carvajal about the 2015 Spanish citizenship law.