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Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: MEC-MIC |
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MENASSEH BEN ISRAEL (c.16041657) , Jewish leader, was born in Lisbon about 1604, and was brought up in Amsterdam. His family had suffered under the Inquisition, but found an asylum first in La Rochelle and later in Holland. Here Menasseh rose to eminence riot only as a rabbi
In 1644 Menasseh met Antonio de Montesinos, who persuaded him that the North-American Indians were the descendants of the lost ten tribes of Israel . This supposed discovery gave a new impulse to Menasseh's Messianic hopes. But he was convinced that the Messianic age needed as its certain precursor the settlement
Israel , a tract
opinion . Cromwell had been moved to sympathy with the Jewish cause partly by his tolerant leanings, but chiefly because he foresaw the importance for English commerce of the presence of the Jewish merchant princes, some of whom had already found their way to London. At this juncture Jews received full rights in the colony of Surinam, which had been English since 1650. In 1655 Menasseh arrived in London. It was during his absence that the Amsterdam Rabbis excommunicated Spinoza, a catastrophe which would probably have been avoided had MenassehSpinoza's teacherbeen on the spot. One of his first acts on reaching London was the issue of his Humble Addresses to the Lord Protector, but its effect was weakened by the issue of Prynne
chief
practical
gradual return. Hence John Evelyn was able to enter in his Diary under the date Dec.- 14, 1655, " Now were the Jews admitted." But the attack on the Jews by Prynne
body
Menasseh ben Israel was the author of many works, but his English tracts remain the only ones of importance. His De :ermine vitae was translated into English by Pococke, and his Conciliator by G. H. Undo. Among his other works were a ritual compendium Tesoro dos dinim, and a treatise in Hebrew on immortality (Nishmath hayim). He was a friend of Rembrandt, who painted his portrait and engraved four etchings to illustrate his Piedra gloriosa. These are preserved in the British Museum. See Graetz, History of the Jews, vol. v. ch. ii.; Lucien Wolf, Menasseh ben Israel's Mission to Oliver Cromwell, with a reprint of the English pamphlets (London, 1901); H. Adler, "A Homage to Menasseh ben Israel," in Transactions of the Tewish Historical Society of England, i.. 25-54. (I. A.) End of Article: MENASSEH BEN ISRAEL (c.16041657) If you wish, you can link directly to this article.
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