Origins
According to Helen Fry, Port Jews often arrived as "refugees from the Inquisition" and the expulsion of Jews from Iberia. They were allowed to settle in port cities as merchants granted permission to trade in ports such as Amsterdam, London, Trieste and Hamburg. Fry notes that their connections with thePort Jewish families and business in the early modern period
Jewish family tradition and strategy was built upon business and safety. Jewish families, as in the case with the Jewish merchant Glikl, married off her children both in nearby cities as well as distant cities for the reason of business and safety. Glikl being a business woman was not uncommon amongst the German Jews. Christian, Italy, and France all differed from Jewish life history in that it was based on ethical will, which included more of a tale of life lessons to be passed on to the children as well as direction on how to proceed after their death. Glikl in writing her memoir focused on analyzing accounts of her life while simultaneously addressing her children. Not only was “ Memoirs of Gluckel of Hameln” a rich source for cultural and social history, but it also had unusual literacy structure and religious resonance. In Jewish family culture ''koved'' was directly in tune with honesty in business which is also connected to your status, ''oysher un koved''. Glikl prided herself on leaving Hamburg without a bad debt with any Jew or non-Jew. Jewish business failure held huge weight in bringing shame and disgrace to the Jewish name.Port Jewish widows in the early modern period
During the early modern period, wives of Port Jew merchants participated in business through their approach of marriage as a business partnership. Cheryl Tallan explains how earlier recordings of Jewish women partaking in their husbands’ business dealings can be witnessed in the case recorded by Rabbi Samson in 1216. During the seventeenth and eighteenth century, women such as Glickl of Hameln, as read in the “ Memoirs of Gluckel of Hameln”, (including both her mother and grandmother) participated in their husbands’ business dealings as Port Jews in Hamburg. As was common with many Jewish couples during this period, women had the opportunity to continue their family business after their husbands were deceased. As a widow, they received a dowry from their husbands upon their husbands’ death. Through the dowries, Jewish widows were able to continue their husbands’ business dealings and their children’s marriage proposals through the utilization of the business networks established prior to their husbands’ death.Expanded to include Ashkenazi merchants
Dubin has proposed that the concept of the "port Jew" be expanded to describe "port Jewry" which she describes as a particular type of Jewish community that existed in European maritime ports and combined maritime commerce with European and Jewish culture. This expanded definition would encompass Ashkenazi as well as Sephardi merchants living in other European ports such as Hamburg, Southampton, Portsmouth, and Odessa.See also
* Jewish pirates * Radhanite * Middleman minoritySources
* *Dubin, Lois. ''The Port Jews of Habsburg Trieste: Absolutist Politics and Enlightenment Culture.'' Stanford: Stanford University Press, 1999 *Cesarani, David ed. ''Port Jews: Jewish Communities in Cosmopolitan Maritime Trading Centres, 1550–1950.'' London: Frank Cass, 2002 *Cesarani, David and Romain, Gemma eds. ''Jews and Port Cities, 1590–1990: Commerce, Community and Cosmopolitanism.'' London: Vallentine Mitchell, 2006 *Monaco, C. S. “Port Jews or a People of the Diaspora? A Critique of the Port Jew Concept,” In ''Jewish Social Studies'' Vol. 15, no. 2 (Winter 2009), pp. 137–66References
{{reflist History of the Jews in Europe Sephardi Jews topics Early Modern economics Age of Sail History of international trade