| 70
                A.D. | Destruction
                of Jerusalem 1,100,000 Jews were killed and
                97,000 taken into slavery and captivity. | 
            
                | 115 | Rebellion of the
                Jews in Mesopotania, Egypt, Cyrene and Cyprus.
                Jews and Romans inflicted many barbaric
                atrocities on each other, causing the death of
                several hundreds of thousands of Romans and Jews. | 
            
                | 132-35 | The
                Bar Kochba rebellion (Bar Kochba was a false
                Messiah). Caused the death of 500,000 Jews;
                thousands were sold into slavery or taken into
                captivity. | 
            
                | 135 | Roman Emperor
                Hadrian commenced his persecution of the Jews.
                Jerusalem established as a pagan city. Erection
                of a Jupiter temple on the temple mountain
                (Moriah) and a temple to Venus on Golgotha. Jews
                were forbidden to practice circumcision, the
                reading of the Law, eating of unleavened bread at
                Passover or any Jewish festival. infringement of
                this edict brought the death penalty. | 
            
                | 315 | Constantine
                the Great established "Christianity" as
                the State religion throughout the Roman Empire;
                issued many anti-Jewish laws. | 
            
                | 379-95 | Theodosius the
                Great expelled Jews from any official gate
                position or place of honor. Permitted the
                destruction of their synagogues if by so doing,
                it served a religious purpose. | 
            
                | 613 | Persecution
                of the Jews in Spain. All Jews who refused to be
                baptized had to leave the country. A few years
                later the remaining Jews were dispossessed,
                declared as slaves and given to pious
                "Christians" of position. All children
                7 years or over were taken from their parents and
                given to receive a "Christian"
                education. | 
            
                | 1096 | Bloody
                persecutions of the Jews at the beginning of the
                First Crusade, in Germany. Along the cities on
                the Rhine River alone, 12,000 Jews were killed.
                The Jews were branded second only to the Moslems
                as the enemies of Christendom. | 
            
                | 1121 | Jews
                driven out of Flanders (now part of Belgium).
                They were not to return nor to be tolerated until
                they repented of the guilt of killing Jesus
                Christ. | 
            
                | 1130 | The Jews of
                London had to pay compensation of 1 million marks
                for allegedly killing a sick man. | 
            
                | 1146-47 | Renewed
                persecution of the Jews in Germany at the
                beginning of the Second Crusade. The French Monk,
                Rudolf, called for the destruction of the Jews as
                an introduction to the Second Crusade. It was
                only because of the intervention of Emperor
                Conrad who declared Nuerenberg and a small
                fortress as places of refuge for the Jews, and
                that of Abbot Bernard of Clairvaux, that the
                result was not quite as devastating as at the
                time of the First Crusade. | 
            
                | 1181 | French King
                Philip banished the Jews from his domain. They
                were permitted to sell all movable possessions,
                but the immovable such as land and houses
                reverted to the king. Seven years later he called
                the Jews back. | 
            
                | 1189 | At
                the coronation of Richard the Lionhearted,
                unexpected persecution of the Jews broke out in
                England. Most Jewish houses in London were
                burned, and many Jews killed. All possessions of
                the Jews were claimed by the Crown. Richard's
                successor alone, relieved the Jews of more than 8
                million marks. | 
            
                | 1215 | At the IV Lateran
                Church Council, restrictions against the Jews by
                the church of Rome were issued. | 
            
                | 1290 | Edward
                I banished the Jews from England. 16,000 Jews
                left the country. | 
            
                | 1298 | Persecution of
                the Jews in Franconia, Bavaria and Austria. The
                Nobleman Kalbfleish alleged that he had received
                a divine order to destroy all the Jews. 140
                Jewish communities were destroyed, and more than
                100,000 Jews were mercilessly killed. | 
            
                | 1306 | King
                Philip the Fair banished the Jews from France.
                100,000 Jews left the country. | 
            
                | 1320 | In France, 40,000
                shepherds dedicated themselves for the Shepherd
                Crusade to free Palestine from the Moslems. Under
                the influence of criminals and land speculators,
                they destroyed 120 Jewish communities. | 
            
                | 1321 | Jews
                were accused of having incited outlaws to poison
                wells and fountains in the district of Guienne,
                France. 5,000 Jews were burned at the stake. | 
            
                | 1348 | Jews were blamed
                for the plague throughout Europe, especially in
                Germany. In Strausberg 2,000 Jews were burned. In
                Maintz 6,000 were killed in most gruesome
                fashion, and in Erfut 3,000; and in Worms 400
                Jews burned themselves in their homes. | 
            
                | 1370 | Jews
                were blamed for having defiled the
                "Host" (wafer used in the Mass) in
                Brabant. The accused were burned alive. Again,
                all Jews were banned from Flanders and until the
                year 1820, every 15 years a feast was kept to
                celebrate the event. | 
            
                | 1391 | Persecutions in
                Spain. In Seville and 70 other Jewish
                communities, the Jews were cruelly massacred and
                their bodies dismembered. | 
            
                | 1394 | Second
                banishment of Jews from France. | 
            
                | 1453 | The Franciscan
                monk, Capistrano, persuaded the King of Poland to
                withdraw all citizens' rights of the Jewish
                people. | 
            
                | 1478 | The
                Spanish inquisition directed against the Jews. | 
            
                | 1492 | The banishment of
                Jews from Spain. 300,000 Jews who refused to be
                "baptized" into the Church of Rome left
                Spain penniless. Many migrated to the Muslim
                country, Turkey, where they found tolerance and a
                welcome. | 
            
                | 1497 | Banishment
                of the Jews from Portugal. King Manuel, generally
                friendly to the Jews, under pressure from Spain
                instigated forced baptism to keep the Jews.
                20,000 Jews desired to leave the country. Many
                were ultimately declared slaves. | 
            
                | 1516 | First Ghetto
                established in Venice. | 
            
                | 1540 | Banishment
                of Jews from Naples and 10 years later, from
                Genoa and Venice. | 
            
                | 1794 | Restriction of
                Jews in Russia, Jewish men were forced to serve
                25 years in the Russian military. Many hundreds
                of thousands of Jews left Russia. | 
            
                | 1846-78 | All
                former restriction, against the Jews in the
                Vatican State were re-inforced by Pope Pius IX. | 
            
                | 1903 | Renewed
                restrictions of Jews in Russia. Frequent pogroms
                (massacres); general impoverishment of Russian
                Jewry. | 
            
                | 1933 | Commencement
                of persecution of Jews in Hitler Germany.
                Inception of the systematic destruction of
                6,000,000 Jews throughout Nazi-occupied Europe. |