NOTES AND SOURCES
Introduction
1. Fernand Braudel and Sian Reynolds (trans.), The Mediterranean and the Mediterranean World in the Age of Philip II (Berkeley, Calif.: University of California Press, 1996), 823.
2. Antonia Fraser, Cromwell: The Lord Protector (New York: Grove Press, 2001), 566.
3. Arnold Wiznitzer, Jews in Colonial Brazil (New York: Columbia University Press, 1960), 60.
Chapter One: Columbus and Jamaica’s Chosen People
1. Kirkpatrick Sale, The Conquest of Paradise (New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1990), 192n: The youths outnumbered adult seamen fifty-seven to forty-two; most stayed loyal to Columbus, but it is not known how many were conversos.
2. Quoted in Salvador de Madariaga, Christopher Columbus, Being the Life of the Very Magnificent Lord Don Cristobal Colon (New York: Christopher Columbus Publishing, 1967), 187.
3. S. E. Morison, Admiral of the Ocean Sea (Boston: Little, Brown, 1942), quotes the royal chronicler’s account of Santangel and his plea to the queen.
4. Simon Wiesenthal, Sails of Hope: The Secret Mission of Christopher Columbus (New York: Macmillan, 1973), 166.
5. http://www.sephardicstudies.org/decree.htm
6. M. Hirsch Goldberg, The Jewish Connection (New York: Steimatzky/Shapolsky Publishing of North America, 1986), 87. In the Zohar (Book of Splendor), Moses de León (1250–1305) opined almost two hundred years before Columbus that “the earth revolves like a ball…when it is day on one-half of the globe, night reigns over the other half.”
7. Zvi Dor-Ner, Columbus and the Age of Discovery (New York: William Morrow, 1991), 104, 105.
8. Benjamin Keen, ed. and trans., The Life of Admiral Christopher Columbus by His Son Ferdinand (New Brunswick, N.J.: Rutgers University Press, 1992), 264–65. Fernando’s description comes from his book, written years later when he was fifty as a brief in support of his family’s lawsuit to recover rights granted Columbus: “No longer able to keep the ships afloat, we ran them ashore as far as we could, grounding them close together board and board, and shoring them up on both sides so they could not budge.”
9. Ibid., 241–57.
10. Padron Morales, Spanish Jamaica, trans. Patrick E. Bryan (Kingston, Jamaica: Ian Randle Publishers, 2003), 20: Fernando writes the view of St. Ann’s Bay from the caravel deck “seemed to [Columbus] the most beautiful of all those he had seen in the Indies.”
11. John Boyd Thacher, Christopher Columbus: His Life, His Work, His Remains As Revealed by Original Printed and Manuscript Records, vol. 2 (New York: G. P. Putnam’s Sons, 1904), 633–34: A copy of the letter was found among Spanish papers in 1655 when the English captured Jamaica. The original, never recovered, was said to belong to a Jamaican Jew whose ancestor was marooned with Columbus.
12. Ibid., 634n.
13. Ibid., 635n.
14. Ibid., 635n.
15. Washington Irving, The Life and Voyages of Christopher Columbus, vol. 2 (New York: G. P. Putnam’s Sons, 1896), 582.
16. Ibid., 634.
17. Samuel Eliot Morison, Journals and Other Documents on the Life and Voyages of Christopher Columbus (New York: Heritage, 1963), 192.
18. Washington Irving, The Life and Voyages of Christopher Columbus, vol. 2, 614; Columbus, when questioned about the gold of Veragua, maintained he brought home no treasure, because, as he wrote, “I would not rob or outrage the country since reason requires that it should be settled, and then the gold may be procured without violence.”
19. At the start of Columbus’s voyage two years before, Ovando refused him shelter in Hispaniola despite an approaching hurricane, and when the rescue ship arrived back in Hispaniola, Ovando freed the Poras brothers and threatened to punish the loyalists who had slain some of the rebels.
20. Irving, The Life and Voyages of Christopher Columbus, vol. 2, 567; Irving quotes his contemporary biographer Bartolome de Las Casas, The History of the Admiral, lib. 2, cap. 32: “To cheer and comfort those who were loyal [Columbus] promised on his return to Spain to throw himself at the feet of the Queen, and represent their loyalty and obtain for them rewards.”
21. Keen, The Life of Admiral Christopher Columbus, 272–73: the full story of the eclipse. A copy of R. Abraham Zacuto’s tables with the marginalia of Columbus is in the Colombian Library in Portugal.
22. William B. Goodwin, Spanish and English Ruins in Jamaica (Boston: Meador Publishing Co., 1938), 13.
23. Clarendon State Papers, vol. 1, Bodleian Library, Oxford University, 14, no. 237. Clarendon’s handwritten translation of a spy’s “secret discoveries” to the Duke of Buckingham in 1623 to encourage him to conquer Jamaica assisted by the island’s Portugals.
24. Hugh Thomas, Rivers of Gold: The Rise of the Spanish Empire from Columbus to Magellan (New York: Random House, 2003), 210. Juan d’Esquivel’s parents were the conversos Pedro d’Esquivel and Constanza Fernández de Arauz.
25. Myrna Katz Frommer and Harvey Frommer, “Melilla: A Bit of Spain That Jews Never Left,” The Philadelphia Jewish Exponent, August 29, 1996. Since 1497, Jews have been living in Melilla, having never been forced to choose between exile and conversion, and until many left after World War II, each extended family had its own synagogue.
26. Irving, The Life and Voyages of Christopher Columbus, vol. 2, 587.
27. Morales, Spanish Jamaica, 18. Francisco Poras would return to hold a post in government. The Poras brothers were themselves conversos and had been placed on the fourth voyage by Columbus at the request of the treasurer of Castile, Alonso de Morales, who was amorously involved with their aunt.
28. Irving, The Life and Voyages of Christopher Columbus, vol. 2, appendix, 642. “Ferdinand had been receiving reports that the mansion Diego was building was actually a fortress and Diego designed to make himself ‘sovereign of the island.’” Reportedly Diego paced back and forth on the patio “awaiting news from Esquivel of the discovery of gold in Jamaica [that] he might declare himself Emperor of the Americas.” Irene A. Wright, “The Early History of Jamaica (1511–1536),” The English Historical Review 36, no. 141 (January 1921), 73. The king writes Diego (February 23, 1512) that he is informed that Esquivel has found more gold than he reported.
29. Frank Cundall and Joseph Pietersz, Jamaica Under the Spaniards, abstracted from the Archives of Seville (Kingston: Institute of Jamaica, 1919), 2.
30. From a letter referenced in Francis J. Osborne, S.J., History of the Catholic Church in Jamaica (Chicago: Loyola University Press, 1988), 482 n
31: Peter Martyr to King Charles, September 9, 1526.31. Ibid., 3; Goodwin, Spanish and English Ruins in Jamaica, 204.
Chapter Two: Adventuring in the New World
1. Samuel Tolkowsky, They Took to the Sea (London: Thomas Yoseloff, 1964), 103–6. An excellent contemporary account of Zacuto and King Manuel.
2. Irwin R. Blacker, ed., Hakluyt’s Voyages (New York: The Viking Press, 1965), 24–38.
3. Tolkowsky, They Took to the Sea, 119–24; Louis B. Wright, Gold, Glory, and Gospel: The Adventurous Lives and Times of the Renaissance Explorers (New York: Athenaeum, 1970), 92–99; Paul Herrmann, The Great Age of Discovery, trans. Arnold J. Pomerans (New York: Harper and Brothers, 1958), 80–84.
4. Tolkowsky, They Took to the Sea, 122.
5. Samuel Eliot Morison, The European Discovery of America: The Southern Voyages (New York: Oxford University Press, 1974), 219–20.
6. J. M. Cohen, ed. and trans., The Four Voyages of Christopher Columbus (Harmondsworth, U.K.: Penguin Books, 1969), 220–21. In a letter to Isabella, Columbus wrote: “I believe that earthly Paradise lies here, which no one can enter except by God’s leave.” Later the well-watered country of the Orinoco would be renamed Venezuela, Little Venice.
7. Wright, Gold, Glory, and Gospel, 103; Charles David Ley, ed., Portuguese Voyages 1498–1663 (London: Everyman’s Library, 1965), 41–59. Report of discovery sent to King Manuel from Brazil May 1, 1500, by the notary Pedro Vaz de Caminha.
8. Wright, Gold, Glory, and Gospel, 106–7; Ley, Portuguese Voyages 1498–1663, quotes notary’s account in Hakluyt Society, series 2, vol. 81 (London, 1898).
9. K. G. Jayne, Vasco da Gama and His Successors 1460 to 1580 (Whitefish, Mont.: Kessinger Publishing, 2004, reprint of 1910 edition), 58.
10. Germán Arciniegas, Amerigo and the New World (New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1955), 123.
11. Tolkowsky, They Took to the Sea, 123.
12. Morison, The European Discovery of America, 288–96.
13. Arciniegas, Amerigo and the New World, 204–7; Tolkowsky, They Took to the Sea, 119–25; Morison, The European Discovery of America, 227, 233, 272–312; Arnold Wiznitzer, Jews in Colonial Brazil (New York: Columbia University Press, 1960), 3–5.
14. Tolkowsky, They Took to the Sea, 125–27; Wiznitzer, Jews in Colonial Brazil, 5–9; Arciniegas, Amerigo and the New World, 246–48; Daniel M. Swetschinski, “Conflict and Opportunity in Europe’s Other Sea: The Adventure of Caribbean Jewish Settlement,” American Jewish Historical Society (December 1982), vol. 2, 217. Portugal’s upper class looked down on the mercantile profession, which they relegated below the seven “mechanical arts” (peasant, hunter, soldier, sailor, surgeon, weaver, blacksmith). Conversos, only 10 percent of the population, constituted nearly 75 percent of the business community.
15. Irene Wright, Early History of Cuba, 1492–1586 (New York: Macmillan, 1916), 27; Dagobert D. Runes, The Hebrew Impact on Western Civilization (New York: Philosophical Library, 1951), 730: “Jews were considered to be especially proficient as crossbowmen, and in some countries were admitted in considerable numbers to the noncommissioned ranks.”
16. Manoel da Silveira Cardozo, The Portuguese in America, 590 B.C.–1974: A Chronology and Fact Book (Dobbs Ferry, N.Y.: Oceana, 1976); Harry Kelsey, Juan Rodriguez Cabrillo (San Marino, Calif.: Huntington Library, 1986): There is also a statue of the explorer at Point Loma in San Diego, maintained by the National Park Service, and in 1992 a stamp was issued in his honor; Seymour Liebman, New World Jewry 1493–1825: Requiem for the Forgotten (New York: KTAV, 1982), 6: “The term Portuguese Jews was used by the inquisitors in the New World after 1528 for all Jews…despite the fact that many had been born in Spain decades after the Expulsion.” Only Old Christians possessing Limpieza de Sangre certificates—proof they were free of Jewish blood for four generations—were allowed to settle Empire lands.
17. Cecil Roth, A History of the Marranos (New York: Harper Torchbook, 1966), 56–62: On March 19, 1497, it was decreed that all Jewish children ages four to fourteen were to be baptized the following Sunday; families who did not appear had their children seized by officials and baptized by force. Parents who didn’t also convert could leave Portugal but their children would remain and be given over to Christian families to be raised in the True Faith. It was in this manner that Isaac Abarvanel lost his twelve-year-old grandson.
18. Swetschinski, “Conflict and Opportunity in Europe’s Other Sea,” 216–18; Jan Glete, Warfare at Sea, 1500–1650 (New York: Routledge Press, 2000), 86: “The commercial expansion was regarded as a threat to the established social order” Anita Libman Lebeson, Pilgrim People (New York: Harper and Brothers, 1950), 4–7: As capitalists they invested in voyages, owned and captained oceangoing ships, and traded with fellow Jews and conversos settled in farflung seaports.
19. Hugh Thomas, Rivers of Gold: The Rise and Fall of the Spanish Empire from Columbus to Magellan (New York: Random House, 2003), 495–97.
20. Seymour B. Liebman, “Hernando Alonso: The First Jew on the North American Continent,” Journal of Inter-American Studies 5, no. 2 (April 1963), 291–96; Seymour B. Liebman, “They Came with Cortes: Notes on Mexican-Jewish History,” Judaism 18, no. 1 (Winter 1969), 91–92; G. R. G. Conway, “Hernando Alonso, a Jewish Conquistador with Cortez in Mexico,” Publications of American Jewish Historical Society (1928), 10–25. The informer’s tale referenced an earlier incident in Hispaniola involving Alonso’s first son, noting Alonso then drank the wine he had poured over the child. Threatened with torture on the rack, the Judaizer confessed he had done so “in mockery of the sacrament of baptism.”
21. Hugh Thomas, Conquest: Cortes, Montezuma, and the Fall of Old Mexico (New York: Simon and Schuster, 1995), 266.
22. Ibid., 529, 777: Thomas quote (“Adventurous women went gaily to men still in their quilted armor”) is from Miguel Léon-Portilla, La Vision de Los Vencidos (Madrid, 1985); pages 148–64 consist of a reprint of Manuel da Silveira Cardoz, “Relacion de la conquista por imformantes anonimos de Tlatelolco.”
23. Hugh Thomas, Who’s Who of the Conquistadors (London: Cassell, 2000), 193. Juan Ponce de Léon II, the son of Juan González, and the son of Antonio de Santa Clara, Juan’s friend from his early days in Cuba, authored on orders from the king the Relación de Puerto Rico of 1582, the first chronicle of the island. See an English translation at http://www.mlab.uiah.fi/simultaneous/Text/eng_puerto_rico.htm.
24. Thomas, Conquest, 359, 399.
25. Ibid., 636.
26. For Alonso, see http://www.geocities.com/lonogria_37/aBastard.htm; for Marina Gutiérrez Flores de la Caballeria, see http://pages.prodigy.net/bluemountain1/estrada1.htm.
27. See www.Sephardim.com.
28. A number of conversos in this chapter are identified in Thomas’s three acclaimed books on the period: The Conquest, Rivers of Gold, and Who’s Who of the Conquistadors. The source for many of his disclosures is from the monumental work of Juan Gill, Los Conversos y la Inquisición Sevillana, 5 vols. (Seville: University of Seville y las Fundacion El Monte, 2000–2002).
29. Seymour B. Liebman, The Jews in New Spain (Miami: University of Miami Press, 1970), 46.
30. Judah Gribetz, Edward L. Greenstein, and Regina Stein, The Timetables of Jewish History: A Chronology of the Most Important People and Events in Jewish History (New York: Simon and Schuster, 1993), 162.
31. Liebman, The Jews in New Spain, 46, quotes Spanish historian Salvador de Madariaga: After 1,500 years on the Iberian Peninsula, Sephardim were as much Spanish as Jewish: “The Jews of the Expulsion left behind a deeply judaized Spain, and went abroad no less Hispanified.”
Chapter Three: The King’s Essential Heretics
1. Frank Cundall and Joseph Pietersz, Jamaica Under the Spaniards, abstracted from the Archives of Seville (Kingston: Institute of Jamaica, 1919), 10–11.
2. Ruth Pike, Enterprise and Adventure: The Genoese in Seville and the Opening of the New World (Ithaca, N.Y.: Cornell University Press, 1966), 60, 89: In the 1530s, the Genoese were licensed to procure African slaves “to supply the needs of the expanding sugar industry on the islands,” and in 1535 transported a thousand slaves. Nowhere is it reported that Portuguese were sent. Irene Wright, “Sugar Industry in the Americas,” American Antiquity 21 (1916), 755–82; Irene Wright, “The History of the Early Sugar Industry in the West Indies from Documents of the Archives of the West Indies in Seville,” Louisiana Planter and Sugar Manufacturer Journal 54 (1915), 14–15: In 1527, New Seville’s sugar mill is described as “a good one, producing good sugar.”
3. Alexandre Herculano, History of the Origin and Establishment of the Inquisition in Portugal, vol. 1, trans. John C. Branner (New York: AMS Press, 1968), 376–78, 380–81: A further indication that Manzuelo’s request for “Portuguese” settlers was for Spanish conversos is the fact that in 1534, when Charles received the communiqué, Portugal’s New Christians were not allowed to emigrate. From 1532 to 1536, Portugal’s king had reversed his policy that for a price permitted conversos to settle his colonies.
4. J. H. Elliott, Imperial Spain: 1469–1716 (London: Penguin, 1963), 52–53.
5. Laredo is Spain’s port on the Bay of Biscay. Hayward Keniston, Francisco de los Corbos, Secretary of the Emperor Charles V (Pittsburgh: University of Pittsburgh Press, 1960), 161: “It was rumored that they were offering 50 ducats for each pregnancy with boy babies to remain in Spain and girls to return with them to Amazonia.”
6. Dudley Pope, The Buccaneer King: The Biography of the Notorious Sir Henry Morgan, 1635–1688 (New York: Dodd, Mead, 1978), 29–30: Charles’s average of 3.5 tons of gold each year was equal to the amount the queen of Sheba gave Solomon. In the sixteenth century, Spaniards “found, looted or mined three times the amount of gold and silver which had been in circulation” before Columbus sailed.
7. Antonio Dominguez Ortiz, The Golden Age of Spain, 1516–1659 (New York: Basic Books, 1971), 47: Jacob Fugger loaned him half of the one-million-florin cost of the election.
8. Germán Arciniegas, Caribbean Sea of the New World (New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1946), 118–21; Henry Cruse Murphy, The Voyage of Verrazzano: A Chapter in the Early History of Maritime Discovery in America (New York, 1875): an appendix includes letters to Charles informing him of Verrazano’s deed and continued threat.
9. C. H. Haring, The Buccaneers in the West Indies in the XVII Century (Hamden, Conn.: Archon Books, 1966; reprint of 1910 edition), 30; Arciniegas, Caribbean Sea of the New World, 118.
10. “Correspondence and Itinerary of Charles V,” ed. William Bradford (London: Bently Publishers, August 31, 1850), 439, 367.
11. Miriam Bodian, Hebrews of the Portuguese Nation, Conversos and Community in Early Modern Amsterdam (Bloomington, Ind.: Indiana University Press, 1997), 11. In 1391, hundreds of thousands of Jews of Spain were forcibly converted or sentenced to death. “This huge influx of New Christians exacerbated social and racial suspicions and eventually led to what would become known as Toledo’s limpieza de sangre or ‘purity of blood’ statutes of 1449 to limit the rights of the new class of Christians. Those who maintained Jewish blood or lineage deriving from Jewish ancestry were classed as ‘impure’ and excluded from positions of power and prestige, and universities. These laws were applied in Seville in 1515, and Santo Domingo in 1525.”
12. William B. Goodwin, Spanish and English Ruins in Jamaica (Boston: Meador Publishing Co., 1938),
13: “[Jewish] descendants of these Portuguese settlers are found in many parts of the island today.” 13. On July 14, 1534, the sultan’s cavalry of fifty thousand horsemen conquered Tabriz in northern Persia, but rather than moving on to threaten Charles’s eastern empire instead turned east and captured Baghdad that October.
14. Neil Grant, Barbarossa, the Pirate King (New York: Hawthorn Books, 1972), 8–9: The bulky ships of Spain and Genoa were easily outmaneuvered by the corsairs’ galley, a long, slender vessel, driven by massive oars with one main triangular sail called a lateen. The pirates would attack an enemy ship by ramming it with its iron bow (resembling a long beak). The corsairs then leaped on board and a hand-to-hand fight would ensue.
15. Ortiz, The Golden Age of Spain, 52–58.
16. Sir Godfrey Fisher, Barbary Legend (Oxford, U.K.: Clarendon Press, 1957), 55: Barbarossa as “General of the Sea” rarely left the land—his functions as admiral were primarily administration and “his naval duties were performed by a lieutenant, until later in the century they were entrusted to a separate officer [Sinan] who, as the local Captain of the Sea, [was] directly responsible to the sultan.”
17. Samuel Tolkowsky, They Took to the Sea (London: Thomas Yoseloff, 1964), 174: On August 16, 1533, Henry VIII’s ambassador in Rome informed his king that a few days earlier “the famous Jewish pirate” was cruising with a strong Turkish fleet of sixty ships off the southern coast of Greece to attack the Spanish fleet defending the western Mediterranean; J. S. Brewer, J. Gairdner, and R. H. Brodie, eds., Letters and Papers, Foreign and Domestic, of the Reign of Henry VIII (London, 1862–1932), vol. 6, 427: Sinan was referred to in 1528 by the Portuguese governor in India as “the great Jew,” who he mistakenly thought had been sent by Suleiman to assist the king of Calicut to fight the Portuguese; Benjamin Arbel, Trading Nations: Jews and Venetians in the Early Modern Eastern Mediterranean (New York: E. J. Brill, 1995), 181, lists many Venetian sources from 1530 that refer to Sinan as “the Jew.”
18. “Correspondence and Itinerary of Charles V,” 349.
19. Keniston, Francisco de los Corbos, 170.
20. E. Hamilton Currey, Sea Wolves of the Mediterranean: The Grand Period of the Moslem Corsairs (New York: Frederick A. Stokes Company, 1914), 108.
21. “Correspondence and Itinerary of Charles V,” 358–59: Charles’s unshakable courage is epitomized in one of his later battles, when, gout having immobilized his neck and made his feet lame, he had himself tied to his horse and galloped into the heart of the thickest action. Grant, Barbarossa, 46–48; Currey, Sea Wolves of the Mediterranean, 107–9.
22. H. Z. (J. W.) Hirschberg, A History of the Jews of North Africa, vol. 2, ed. Eliezer Bashan and Robert Attal (Leiden: E. J. Brill, 1981), 480, quotes the contemporary historian R. Josef Ha-Kohen’s account of the aftermath of the battle: “The Jews of whom there were many, in part fled into the desert, hungry, thirsty and completely destitute, and the Arabs plundered everything they brought with them; and many died at that time.”
23. Keniston, Francisco de los Corbos, 176.
24. Cundall and Pietersz, Jamaica Under the Spaniards, 12.
25. Padron Morales, Spanish Jamaica, trans. Patrick E. Bryan (Kingston, Jamaica: Ian Randle Publishers, 2003), Appendix 6, 278–79: In February 1537, the king gave in to her demand for power over the church: “Upon our consideration…that the resolution of these lawsuits is in doubt…on behalf of Dona Maria de Toledo…and Admiral Don Luis Columbus, her son…we grant leave to thee and thy successors whereby thou mightst appoint persons to the Abbacy, including its revenues, as well as to other offices in the churches on the aforesaid island.”
26. Ibid., 65: The royal edict also granted the family twenty-five square leagues in the province of Veragua, where Columbus had obtained the sixty-three gold pendants, but the land proved to be “swampy and unprofitable” and nineteen years later Don Luis gave up Veragua in return for an annual payment of seventeen thousand ducats.
27. Cundall and Pietersz, Jamaica Under the Spaniards, 13.
28. The Jewish Encyclopedia (JewishEncyclopedia.com), “Antwerp” (by Richard Gottheil): “Antwerp became the center of Portugal’s East Indian trade, and many of the rich merchants and bankers of Lisbon had branch houses there. In 1536, according to a document in the Belgian state archives, Charles V directed the magistrates of Antwerp to allow conversos to settle Antwerp.”
29. Tolkowsky They Took to the Sea, 203.
30. Hirschberg, A History of the Jews of North Africa, vol. 2, 9.
31. Christopher and Jean Serpell, Elba and the Tuscan Archipelago (London: Jonathan Cape, 1977).
32. In his remaining years, Charles made a series of abdications that left the Hapsburg dominions divided between Austria and Spain. By 1555 he had given his son Philip Naples, Milan, and the Netherlands, and in 1556 retired to the monastery of Yuste.
33. Christopher Hare, A Great Emperor: Charles V, 1519–1558 (New York: Charles Scribner’s Sons, 1917), 199.
34. Gertrude Von Schwarzenfeld, Charles V, Father of Europe (Chicago: Henry Regnery Co., 1957), 278–79: On his bedside table were a Bible, his favorite heraldic romance Il Cortegiano, and Machiavelli’s The Prince. On penance days, he “beat himself with the rough pieces of a knotted rope till he had worn away the knots.”
35. Tolkowsky, They Took to the Sea, 183.
36. Jane S. Gerber, Jewish Society in Fez (Leiden: E. J. Brill, 1980), 166–69.
Chapter Four: Samuel Palache, the Pirate Rabbi
1. The family’s rabbinical lineage goes back to the tenth century, when Moshe ben Chanoch, a famous Talmudic scholar from Babylon, was captured by pirates and taken as a slave to Córdoba. Redeemed by the community, he became its rabbi, married into the Palache family, and along with his son established Spain as a center of Torah study. Down to Samuel’s time, family members rose to prominence as rabbis in Italy, Turkey, and Greece. Jewish Encyclopedia, “Palache” Hirschberg, A History of the Jews in North Africa, vol. 2, 212n (extensive note on Palache rabbis).
2. Mercedes García-Arenal and Gerard Wiegers, A Man of Three Worlds: Samuel Palache, a Moroccan Jew in Catholic and Protestant Europe, trans. Martin Beagles (Baltimore: John Hopkins University Press, 2003), 24–25.
3. The roving rabbi’s influence on the boys brings to mind the uncle in Death of a Salesman.
4. H. Graetz, Popular History of the Jews, vol. 5, trans. Rabbi A. B. Rhine, ed. Alexander Harkavy (New York: Hebrew Publishing Company, 1937), 55: David Jesurun, “the boy poet,” gave the city the sobriquet “New Jerusalem” when, on the run from the Inquisition, he reached the safety of Amsterdam and, inspired, wrote his paean to it.
5. H. I. Bloom, The Economic Activities of the Jews in Amsterdam in the 17th and 18th Centuries (Williamsport, Pa.: Baynard Press, 1937), 78n23: “The Jews of Amsterdam are so expert that, after disguising the merchandise by mingling it with other goods, or packing it in another way or remarking it, they are not afraid to go to certain Portuguese ports and resell the goods there.”
6. García-Arenal and Wiegers, A Man of Three Worlds, 5: The duke wrote that even if they did seduce a few New Christians they were less a threat to His Majesty than the many Barbary Jews in his domain who were spies and should be expelled.
7. Ibid., 6.
8. Ibid., 5.
9. Ibid., 10.
10. Ibid., 11.
11. Isidore Harris, Jewish Historical Society of England, “A Dutch Burial Ground and Its English Connections,” 113.
12. Henrich Graetz, History of the Jews, vol. 4 (Philadelphia: Jewish Publication Society of America, 1941), 663.
13. John J. Murray, Amsterdam in the Age of Rembrandt (Norman: University of Oklahoma Press, 1967), 21.
14. García-Arenal and Wiegers, A Man of Three Worlds, 56.
15. Ibid., 55.
16. Ibid., 76.
17. Ibid., 77.
18. Hirschberg, A History of the Jews in North Africa, vol. 2, 214–15.
19. García-Arenal and Wiegers, A Man of Three Worlds, 72.
20. Odette Vlessing, “Samuel Palache: Earliest History of Amsterdam Portuguese Jews,” in Dutch Jewish History, vol. 3 (Jerusalem: The Institute for Research on Dutch Jewry, 1993), 52.
21. Ibid., 50; Jewish Encyclopedia, “Palache.”
22. Hirschberg, A History of the Jews in North Africa, vol. 2.
23. David Carrington, “A Jewish Buccaneer,” Jewish Chronicle, November 4, 1955: Palache obtained from the Netherlands permission to “levee and raise so many mariners and seafaring men as he shall have need with license from the States General…to Barbary where Palache went up to the King…and [received] a commission from him to go to sea and take all Spaniards that he could meet with.”
24. García-Arenal and Wiegers, A Man of Three Worlds, 85.
25. Ibid., 77–79. In February 1612, Sidan sent an urgent plea to Samuel to hurriedly come to his aid with two ships and a thousand men. The sultan was desperate. His brother, Ibn Abu Mahalli, a radical Islamist warlord hoped to rid the nation of Jews who were overrunning his realm. Mahalli was given undue credibility in July when Morocco’s Dutch ambassador recommended the States General recognize the self-styled “new king” as Morocco’s ruler. When his report reached the Netherlands, Samuel’s brother Joseph and nephew Moses refuted the ambassador’s claim. The following year, Mahalli was killed by an ally of Sidan, and the Dutch diplomat, charged with treason, was briefly imprisoned. Sidan was again recognized as Morocco’s supreme ruler.
26. García-Arenal and Wiegers, A Man of Three Worlds, 85.
27. Vlessing, “Samuel Palache,” 52.
28. García-Arenal and Wiegers, A Man of Three Worlds, 88–89.
29. Ibid., 90.
30. Ibid., 91.
31. Jewish Quarterly Review 14 (1902), 358, reprints, letter from London, dated November 4, 1614, from John Chamberlain to his friend Sir Dudley Carleton, the British ambassador at Venice: “Here is a Jew Pirate arrested that brought three prizes of Spaniards into Plymouth…he shall likely pass out of here well enough for he has league and license under the King’s hand for his free egress and regress which was not believed till he made proof of it.” See also the Acts of the Privy Council, December 23, 1614, Privy Council to Sir William Craven, Alderman: “The Lordships give order for the restraint and safe keeping of Samuel Palache, a Jew, lately arrived at Plymouth [charged with] committing piracy and outrage upon the subjects of the King of Spain…Palache hath alleged that he is a servant unto the King of Barbary, and by him employed as his agent unto the States United, and that from the said King his master he had received commission for the arming and setting forth of ships of war, by virtue of which commission (together with license of the States United) he pretends the fact to be justifiable and no way with the compass of piracy.”
32. Robert P. Tristram Coffin, The Dukes of Buckingham: Playboys of the Stuart World (New York: Macmillan, 1931), 73.
33. García-Arenal and Wiegers, A Man of Three Worlds, 92–93.
34. Ibid., 87: When Sidan thought the Dutch were going over to Mahalli and he was near to losing his kingdom, he had Samuel offer Medina Sidonia the Mediterranean port town of La Mamoa in exchange for military support. When the duke passed the offer on to Philip, the king, suspecting Samuel was a double agent, told the duke not to deal with him.
35. Ibid., 80–82.
36. J. A. J. Villiers, “Holland and Some of Her Jews,” Jewish Review 7 (1912), 10–12: The day after the funeral, the States General noted: “His Excellency [Prince Maurice], and the State Council accompanied the body of Senor Samuel Palache, Agent of the King of Barbary, as far as the bridge in the Houtstraat.”
37. García-Arenal and Wiegers, A Man of Three Worlds, 62.
38. Bloom, The Economic Activities of the Jews, 14, 15n70: “Six months after the demise of Palache his nephew, Moses representing the estate sold two Torah scrolls to Neve Shalom for 1,000 guilders.”
Chapter Five: Amsterdam, the New Jerusalem
1. On the 1605 pardon, see H. P. Salomon, Portrait of a New Christian, Fernão Álvares Melo, 1569–1632 (Paris: Fundação Calouste Gulbenkian, Centro Cultural Portugués, 1982), 43–46; Wiznitzer, Jews in Colonial Brazil, 33–34: “The assessment of 1,700,000 cruzados was divided among all the New Christians of Portugal…And New Christians could not leave Portugal without proving that they had paid their part of the assessment or given the necessary guarantee for its payment…After the expiration of its one year term, the Holy Inquisition resumed the prosecution of Judaizers among the New Christians…any New Christian who tried to leave port without paying the assessment was to forfeit his possessions in favor of the crown. And the person denouncing the offender was to receive one third of the recovered proceeds.”
2. Benjamin Arbel, Trading Nations: Jews and Venetians in the Early Modern Eastern Mediterranean (New York: E. J. Brill, 1995), 180–81; H. I. Bloom, The Economic Activities of the Jews in Amsterdam in the 17th and 18th Centuries (Williamsport, Pa.: Baynard Press, 1937), 93n70: The Spanish had a different explanation for aliases. In 1654 the Spanish consul in Amsterdam wrote the Spanish ambassador: “The president of the Synagogue signs himself Cortez instead of Corticos,…his real name…It is the custom of members of his nation to take as many names as they please,…so as not to jeopardize their parents or relatives who are known by the name in Spain.” Daniel Swetschinski, “The Portuguese Jews of 17th Century Amsterdam: Cultural Continuity and Adaption,” in Essays in Modern Jewish History, ed. Frances Malino and Phyllis Cohen Albert (Rutherford, N.J.: Fairleigh Dickinson University Press, 1985), 58–60: Ninety-one percent of the community men were named after patriarchs. The favorite first names (in order of preference) were Abraham, Isaac, David, Moses, Joseph, Samuel, Aaron, Benjamin, Solomon, Daniel, and Emanuel.
3. Joachim Prinz, The Secret Jews (New York: Random House, 1973), 70–74.
4. Seymour B. Liebman, The Jews in New Spain (Miami: University of Miami Press, 1970), 589; Gerber, Jewish Society in Fez, 63; Jan Stoutenbeek and Paul Vigeveno, A Guide to Jewish Amsterdam (De Haan: Jewish Historical Museum, 1985), 13: In 1616, Jews were forbidden “physical communion with Christian wives or daughters in or outside the state of marriage even though these women themselves might be of bad reputation.” Bloom, Economic Activities of the Jews, 20: In 1616, Jews were forbidden to employ Christian servants.
5. Graetz, History of the Jews, vol. 4, 57.
6. Prinz, The Secret Jews, 74: In 1660, Isaac Orobio de Castro described the situation in Amsterdam. “There are those…who undergo circumcision as soon as they arrive, love God’s law and are eager to learn that which they and their ancestors had forgotten during their years of their imprisonment…There is another group who indulge in the idolatry of logic…they are full of vanity, haughtiness and a sense of superiority because they believe they know everything…They place themselves under the happy yoke of Judaism…but their vanity and so-called superiority prevents them from accepting our teachings…The trouble is that the young…admire them and follow suit. They all land quickly in the abyss of atheism and apostasy.”
7. Odette Vlessing, “Samuel Palache: Earliest History of Amsterdam Portuguese Jews,” in Dutch Jewish History, vol. 3 (Jerusalem: The Institute for Research on Dutch Jewry, 1993), 52.
8. Simon M. Schama, “A Different Jerusalem: The Jews in Rembrandt’s Amsterdam,” in The Jews in the Age of Rembrandt, ed. Susan Morgenstein and Ruth Levine (Rockville, Md.: The Judaic Museum of the Jewish Community Center of Greater Washington, 1981), 3.
9. Swetschinski, “Conflict and Opportunity in Europe’s Other Sea: The Adventure of Caribbean Jewish Settlement,” American Jewish Historical Society (December 1982), vol. 2, 216–17: “Old Christian Portugal traditionally disdained the mercantile profession…It was therefore natural for many New Christian outcasts to assume a position in that segment of Portuguese society that was numerically understaffed and socially underrated…New Christians constituted about 65%–75% of the total Portuguese mercantile community while hardly totaling more than 10% of the population.”
10. John J. Murray, Amsterdam in the Age of Rembrandt (Norman: University of Oklahoma Press, 1967), 49.
11. Schama, “A Different Jerusalem,” 8: “There was a willingness to use Jews in high risk areas of the economy where more prudent or nervous investors were reluctant to venture.” Jews were only let in on Holland’s more speculative ventures like invading the New World and attacking the Spanish silver fleet. When these paid off the brothers were set, big-time: on page 642 Schama quotes Elie Luzac, The Wealth of Holland, vol. 1 (1778), 63, 501: “It was only in 1612, in imitation of certain Jews who had taken refuge among them, and who had it was said set up counting houses everywhere, that the Dutch began to set up their own and to send their ships all over the Mediterranean.”
12. Vlessing, “Samuel Palache,” 53.
13. Ibid., 54, 62–63: From the time they entered Amsterdam, Jewish merchants dominated the sugar trade. In an address to the States General, Amsterdam’s Portuguese merchants wrote: “During the 12 year truce, thousands of cases of sugar were brought each year to Holland in our ships…shipping and commerce increased so considerably that each year 12 to 15 ships were built and added to the trade…We were so successful that we drove all the Portuguese caravels that used to carry the sugar from these waters.” The merchants wrote of other benefits Holland derived from their trade with Brazil: “The greatest benefit gained from this trade, namely, the sugar refineries…increased from three or four, 25 years ago, to 25 in Amsterdam alone, supplying Holland with sugar [as well as] France, England, Germany, and the East.” Cornelis Ch. Goslinga, The Dutch in the Caribbean and on the Wild Coast 1580–1680 (Asen, the Netherlands: Von Gorcum, 1971), 149: During the truce, the Dutch-Portuguese link controlled as much as two-thirds of the Brazilian trade with Europe.
14. Jonathan I. Israel, “The Changing Role of the Dutch Sephardim in International Trade, 1595–1715,” in Dutch Jewish History, vol. 1, ed. Jozeph Michman (Jerusalem: Tel Aviv University, 1984), 33: “Dutch Sephardim overseas commerce is characterized by the primacy of dealings with Portugal and its colonies…via Lisbon.”
15. Ibid., 36: “During the Truce years, the vast bulk of the freight-contracts signed by Dutch Sephardim were for voyages to and from Portugal.”
16. Dorothy F. Zeligs, A History of Jewish Life in Modern Times (New York: Bloch Publishing Company, 1940), 109: In the seventeenth century the Dutch owned more than half the merchant ships of Europe.
17. Schama, “A Different Jerusalem,” 6: “The Dutch Republic represented a prototype of that liberal pluralist socialist society—the imagined arcadia of 19th century Jews—that would enable each faith to practice as it wished without having to…suffer the stigma of dual allegiance.”
18. Daniel M. Swetschinski, Reluctant Cosmopolitans: The Portuguese Jews of 17th Century Amsterdam (Portland, Ore.: Littman Library of Jewish Civilization, 2000), 62.
19. Egon E. Kirsch, Tales from Seven Ghettos (London: Robert Uncombed & Co. Ltd., 1948), 182–83.
20. Bloom, The Economic Activities of the Jews, 19–20: “Philosopher and jurist Hugo Grotius…commissioned to draw up regulations regarding Jews…said they should be admitted but limited to three hundred families; they were not to hold political office nor marry the daughters of the land.” Sabbath was respected and they could swear by “the Almighty who has…given His Laws through Moses” 23–24: In 1632 magistrates ruled: “The Jews in this city who [are] or shall become burghers [are] forbidden to start a retail business.” Also they could not join or form craft guilds.
21. Edgar Samuel, “The Trade of the New Christians of Portugal in the Seventeenth Century,” in The Sephardi Heritage, vol. 2., ed. R. D. Barnett and W. M. Schwab (Grendon, U.K.: Gibraltar Books, 1989), 109.
22. Steven Nadler, Rembrandt’s Jews (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2003), 28.
23. Ibid., 15–16, lists his Jewish neighbors.
24. Jonathan Israel, “Sephardic Immigration into the Dutch Republic, 1595–1672,” Studia Rosenthaliana 23, no. 1 (1989), 51.
25. P. J. Helm, History of Europe, 1450–1660 (London: G. Bell & Sons, Ltd., 1966), 234.
26. Israel, “Sephardic Immigration into the Dutch Republic,” 51: Manuel Pimentel’s will showed he had money invested in Venice, Constantinople, Spain, and Holland. His bookkeeper Hector Mendes Bravo, who reconverted to Christianity, was a spy who in 1614 submitted the names of 120 families from Amsterdam and the names of their correspondents.
27. Arnold Wiznitzer, Jews in Colonial Brazil (New York: Columbia University Press, 1960), 46–47.
28. Jane S. Gerber, The Jews of Spain, A History of the Sephardic Experience (New York: The Free Press, 1992), 10: The holding of Jewish slaves was ruled illegal in the Talmud; therefore the slave who converted was immediately freed. Such conversions were commonplace since the Talmud prohibited Jews from keeping uncircumcised slaves; Eli Faber, Jews, Slaves and the Slave Trade: Setting the Record Straight (New York: New York University Press, 1998), 17: Regulation of Brazil’s Zur Israel, the first synagogue in the New World: “A slave shall not be circumcised without first having been freed by his master, so that the master shall not be able to sell him from the moment the slave will have bound himself [to Judaism].”
29. Wiznitzer, Jews in Colonial Brazil, 47: In 1618, Alvaro Sanches informed the Inquisition’s inspector in Bahia that a Jewish friend (Díego Lopes, a candy manufacturer) told him of the incident.
30. Schama, “A Different Jerusalem,” 16.
31. Prinz, The Secret Jews, pp. 75–87; full account in autobiography of Uriel da Costa, A Specimen of Human Life (New York: Bergman Publishers, 1967).
32. Yosef Kaplan, “The Intellectual Ferment in the Spanish-Portuguese Community of 17th Century Amsterdam,” in The Sephardi Legacy, vol. 2, ed. Haim Beinart (Jerusalem: Magnes Press, 1992), 295.
33. Five years after his brother’s suicide, Abraham da Costa as head of the Mahamad authored the petition that led the States General to grant burgher rights to Dutch Jews, and a few years later, Joseph da Costa, the son of another brother, made use of this privilege in joining with other Jews in New Amsterdam to secure their civil rights.
34. Two other tortures commonly applied to negativos (prisoners who did not confess) were the strappado and water torment: For the strappado, a naked prisoner, with his hands tied behind his back and the rope connected to an overhead pulley, was raised to the ceiling, then let go, but before his feet touched the ground, he was jerked to a halt so that his arms were pulled from their sockets, dislocating both shoulders. This process was usually repeated for an hour. In the water torment, a wet cloth was placed over the open mouth and nostrils of a prostrate prisoner. Because a constant stream of water was poured into it, the prisoner could not help but suck in the cloth, which the torturer then suddenly removed, drawing with it the innards of the victim’s throat.
35. The Conversion & Persecutions of Eve Cohan, a 1680 pamphlet found in Harvard University’s Houghton Library for rare books and manuscripts. Donated 1780. The pamphlet states that after the death of his first wife, Abraham Cohen married Rebekah Palache, Samuel’s grandniece, and two children from the marriage also married Palaches. The third child was Eva. The pamphlet is written by an ex-Jew about Eva’s tribulations after running off and marrying the Christian servant of her elder stepbrother, Jacob Cohen Henriques.
36. Wiznitzer, Jews in Colonial Brazil, 171.
37. Odette Vlessing, “The Marranos’ Economic Position in the Early 17th Century,” Dutch Jewish History, vol. 3 (Jerusalem: The Institute for Research on Dutch Jewry, 1993), 173: From the time they entered Amsterdam, Jewish merchants dominated the sugar trade. This continued after the Dutch conquered Recife and considerably increased Brazil’s sugar production.
38. http://www.yale.edu/lawweb/avalon/westind.htm; DWIC charter provisions XL and XLII grant the Company the right to build and garrison forts, and maintain warships.
39. Israel, “Sephardic Immigration into the Dutch Republic,” 16: The States General protested to the king that “Portuguese citizens should not be treated any differently than other subjects and urged the release of the goods and money involved.” Jonathan I. Israel, Diasporas Within a Disapora, 1540–1740, Brill Series in Jewish Studies (Boston: E. J. Brill, 2002), 140–41; Swetschinski, Reluctant Cosmopolitans, 114.
40. Wiznitzer, Jews in Colonial Brazil, 36.
41. Anita Novinsky, “Sephardim in Brazil: The New Christians,” in The Sephardi Heritage, vol. 2, ed. R. D. Barnett and W. M. Schwab (Jacksonville, NC: Gibraltar Books, 1989), 443; Wiznitzer, Jews in Colonial Brazil, 41.
42. Anita Novinsky, “Sephardim in Brazil,” 443.
43. Jane S. Gerber, Jewish Society in Fez (Leiden: E. J. Brill, 1980), 169–73: From the time of the Crusades, when the cane root was transplanted from Asia to the Mediterranean basin, the making and selling of sugar was dominated by Jews. Page 173: In the 1590s, England’s Queen Elizabeth annually imported eighteen thousand pounds of Moroccan sugar for her household.
44. David Raphael, The Expulsion 1492 Chronicles (Hollywood, Calif.: Carmi House Press, 1992): More than thirty years later, the terrible scenes still lived in the mind of the old Bishop Coutinho who “saw many persons dragged by the hair to the font. Sometimes, I saw a father, his head covered in sign of grief and pain, lead his son to the font, protesting and calling God to witness that they wished to die together in the law of Moses. Yet more terrible things that were done with them did I witness, with my own eyes.” Afterward, King Manuel informed the Catholic kings of Spain, “There are no more Jews in Portugal.”
45. Wiznitzer, Jews in Colonial Brazil, 10. São Tomé remains an open chapter. An early account of the forced exodus reported many of the seven hundred children drowned in the initial stormy voyage, and later others were ransomed. However, it is hard to square the accuracy of this account with the continued presence there of so many conversos. In 1632, a foreign visitor wrote that conversos of São Tomé numbered about half the population, and were still looked upon as Jews: “The island is so infested with New Christians that they practice the Jewish rites almost openly” (from Braudel, The Mediterranean and the Mediterranean World, vol. 2, p. 814, quoting J. Cuvelier, “L’ancien Congo d’apres les Archives romaines, 1518–1640” [Brussels: Royal Academy of Colonial Sciences, 1954], 498). For an excellent article on the island’s conversos for the period 1492–1654, see Robert Garfield, “A Forgotten Fragment of the Diaspora: The Jews of Sao Tome Island, 1492–1654,” in The Expulsion of the Jews: 1492 and After, ed. Raymond B. Waddington and Arthur H. Williamson (New York: Garland Publishing, 1994); see also Gloria Mound, “Judaic Research in the Balearic Islands and Sao Tome,” in Jews in Places You Never Thought Of, ed. Karen Primack (Jersey City: KTAV, 1998), 60–63. How the descendants of those original kidnapped children were able to maintain their heritage is a mystery. Perhaps, like Moses’s mother, their parents secretly emigrated with them. Estimating their average age at eight to ten years old, they would have been in their midforties when Coelho sent his recruiters. Some of their children would certainly have welcomed the chance to carve their niche in the New World.
46. Wiznitzer, Jews in Colonial Brazil, 12–14, provides a detailed list of dozens of heretical acts whose continued observance by conversos expose them as Judaizers. These include obvious ones such as circumcision and reciting Jewish prayers and obscure ones such as changing into fresh underwear on Friday evening and blessing children without making the sign of the cross.
47. Ibid., 57–58; Liebman, The Jews in New Spain, 213, describes the secret code used in Jewish correspondence.
48. Wiznitzer, Jews in Colonial Brazil, 47.
49. The secret organization was exposed by the historian Seymour Liebman, who spent much of his scholarly life translating thousands of Inquisition trials in the New World.
50. Seymour Liebman, New World Jewry 1493–1825: Requiem for the Forgotten (New York: KTAV, 1982), 80, 84, 92, 93.
51. Ibid., 94.
52. H. I. Bloom, The Economic Activities of the Jews in the 17th and 18th Centuries (Williamsport, Pa.: Baynard Press, 1937), 64–65n146, 86–87n55; Werner Sombart, The Jews and Modern Capitalism, trans. M. Epstein, (Glencoe, Ill.: The Free Press, 1951), 184: “Travelers admired the splendor and luxury of the houses of these refugees who dwelt in what were really palaces. If you turn to a collection of engravings of that period, you discover that the most magnificent mansions in Amsterdam were inhabited by Jews.”
53. Cyrus Adler, “A Contemporary Memorial Relating to Damages to Spanish Interests in America Done by the Jews of Holland (1634),” American Jewish Historical Society, 45–47. Informer’s statement: “Bento de Osorio, alias David Ossorio gives the orders & makes the plans for plundering and destroying, thinking by this means to destroy Christianity. It is with this object in view that they try to maintain so many spies in so many cities of Castile, Portugal, Biscay, Brazil & elsewhere.”
54. Wiznitzer, Jews in Colonial Brazil, 49.
55. Ibid., 52.
56. Ibid., 51.
57. Ibid., 52.
58. Seymour Liebman, “The Great Conspiracy in Peru,” Academy of American Franciscan History 28, no. 2 (October 1971), 182: The quote is from a letter from the Council of Portugal to Philip IV.
59. Wiznitzer, Jews in Colonial Brazil, 54.
60. Ibid., 54.
61. Ibid., 60.
62. Adler, “A Contemporary Memorial,” 45–47.
63. Ibid., 45–47.
Chapter Six: Zion Warriors in the New World
1. Cyrus Adler, “A Contemporary Memorial Relating to Damages to Spanish Interests in America Done by the Jews of Holland (1634),” American Jewish Historical Society, 48; Jonathan I. Israel, Diaspora Within a Diaspora, 1540–1740, Brill Series in Jewish Studies (Boston: E. J. Brill, 2002), 148–50.
2. Mendel Peterson, The Funnel of Gold (Boston: Little, Brown, 1975), 248–67.
3. Nigel Cawthorne, Pirates: An Illustrated History (Edison, N.J.: Chart-well Books, 2005), 29.
4. H. I. Bloom, The Economic Activities of the Jews in the 17th and 18th Centuries (Williamsport, Pa.: Baynard Press, 1937), 92: In 1655, the Spanish consul in Amsterdam with the aid of spies collected the names of Jewish merchants trading with Spain together with the names of their correspondents there. Leading the list was Bento Osorio. King Philip IV submitted the list to the Inquisition.
5. Information about the Spanish treasure fleet comes from Robert F. Marx, Shipwrecks of the Western Hemisphere: 1492–1825 (New York: World Publishing Company, 1971); Dave Horner, Shipwrecks, Skin Divers and Sunken Gold: The Treasure Galleons (New York: Dodd, Mead, 1965): In April 1628, the Tierra Firme set sail for the New World. Skirting the north coast of South America, the galleons, after two months at sea, docked at Cartagena, where they unloaded trade goods and collected the treasures brought to port: gold and diamonds from Venezuela, pearls from Margarita Island, and gold and emeralds from the mountains of Colombia. The Tierra Firme then proceeded to Portobelo, on Panama’s Caribbean coast, where the galleons filled their holds with Potosí silver that had been transported six thousand miles from Lima, first by ship to Panama, and then across the isthmus by mule train. After loading the silver, now converted into seventy-pound bars, the galleons returned to Cartagena to collect the remainder of the riches that had come in. For another month, the port took on the appearance of a tumultuous bazaar with merchants, peddlers, prostitutes, sailors, and adventurers gambling, drinking, playing, and trading for luxury goods and manufactured items from Europe. In August 1628, the annual fiera ended, and the Tierra Firme sailed north to Havana to meet up with the flota.
6. Adler, “A Contemporary Memorial,” 45.
7. Arnold Wiznitzer, Jews in Colonial Brazil (New York: Columbia University Press, 1960), 59.
8. Ibid., 58. This was disclosed by the defeated Portuguese governor in his diary.
9. Wiznitzer, The Records of the Earliest Jewish Community in the New World (New York: American Jewish Historical Society, 1954), 3n2.
10. Bloom, The Economic Activities of the Jews, 129–30.
11. Wiznitzer, Jews in Colonial Brazil, 64.
12. Ibid., 62; Dudley Pope, The Buccaneer King: The Biography of Sir Henry Morgan, 1635–1688 (New York: Dodd, Mead, 1978), 53.
13. Wiznitzer, Jews in Colonial Brazil, 59.
14. Jacob R. Marcus, The Colonial American Jew 1492–1776, vol. 1 (Detroit: Wayne State University Press, 1970), 70.
15. Wiznitzer, Jews in Colonial Brazil, 88.
16. Ibid., 74, 129.
17. Ibid., 63.
18. Ibid., 90–91.
19. Marcus, The Colonial American Jew, vol. 1, 77.
20. Wiznitzer, Jews in Colonial Brazil, 64.
21. C. R. Boxer, The Dutch in Brazil, 1624–1654 (Oxford, U.K.: Clarendon Press, 1957), 115–16.
22. Bradford Burns, A History of Brazil (New York: Columbia University Press, 1970), 48.
23. Primary sources for this chapter are quoted from the works of Arnold Wiznitzer and Rabbi Herbert Bloom.
24. Anita Libman Lebeson, Pilgrim People (New York: Harper and Brothers, 1950), 43; Wiznitzer, The Records of the Earliest Jewish Community in the New World, 55. The street led to the Jewish Square; there was also a Playa de Judios (Jewish Beach).
25. Lebeson, Pilgrim People, 43.
26. Wiznitzer, Jews in Colonial Brazil, 83.
27. Ibid., 111.
28. Jacob Rader Marcus, Early American Jewry, vol. 1 (Philadelphia: KTAV, 1975).
29. From the top, the figures in this paragraph are quoted from Herbert I. Bloom, “A Study of Brazilian Jewish History 1623–1654, Based Chiefly upon the Findings of the Late Samuel Oppenheim,” Publications of the American Jewish Historical Society 33 (1934), 86; Wiznitzer, Jews in Colonial Brazil, 35; ibid., 69–70; Bloom, “A Study,” 100.
30. Bloom, The Economic Activities of the Jews, 133.
31. Ibid., 133.
32. Wiznitzer, Jews in Colonial Brazil, 84.
33. Ibid., 72: From 1636 to 1645 the Company brought 23,163 slaves to Brazil, which they sold for 6,714,423 florins. After 1645, owing to the civil war the Company carried the slaves to Curaçao. The 26,000 figure is the estimate of Faber, Jews, Slaves and the Slave Trade, 21.
34. Faber’s Jews, Slaves and the Slave Trade uses primary source material, and focuses on the British slave trade in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, which demonstrates “the minimal nature of Jews’ involvement in the subjugation of Africans in the Americas.”
35. Wiznitzer, The Records of the Earliest Jewish Community, 22; In 1643, Moses apparently changed professions. He is listed as a tax collector, indicating he had retired from the sea, but not necessarily from his plundering ways.
36. Ibid.; pages 1–107 reprint (with index) “The Minute Book of Congregations Zur Israel of Recife and Magen Abraham of Mauricia, Brazil.” Invaluable work on these communities and their symbiotic relationship was done by Samuel Oppenheim, Herbert Bloom, and Arnold Wiznitzer. Much primary material is available, including the minute book of Zur Israel for the years 1648–53.
37. Bloom, “A Study,” 91.
38. Wiznitzer, Jews in Colonial Brazil, 74–75.
39. Adler, “A Contemporary Memorial,” 45; Yosef Kaplan, “The Portuguese Jews in Amsterdam: From Forced Conversion to Return to Judaism,” Studia Rosenthal 15 (1981), 41–42. Quote from trial record: “Esteban de Ares de Fonseca was living in Spain in Pamplona when he met a cousin from Bordeaux…where covert Jews ‘persuaded him to abandon the faith of the Lord Jesus of Nazareth and to adopt the Mosaic religion which is the true one and in which he will be saved.’…He arrived in Amsterdam in 1625 and was greeted by relatives who received him with ‘great joy and told him that these were the wonders of God who brings those who live in the blindness of Christianity to Judaism.’ They immediately began to take care of him in order to turn him into a Jew because (they said) he was the child of a mother of Jewish origin. When he saw this, he did not want to be circumcised or become a Jew and they placed him in the company of a rabbi to persuade him to observe (this religion) and after he spent six months with him and could not persuade him, they excommunicated him so that no Jew would come in contact with him or speak with him. After 15 or 16 days in that position in which nobody spoke to him or helped him, he went (to them) and they agreed to circumcise him. After circumcising him they named him David.” Kaplan writes: “It is doubtful we can rely on this as he sought to clear himself and present his conversion in Amsterdam as an act that was forced upon him against his will.”
40. Richard Dunn, Sugar and Slaves (Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1972), 61; Wiznitzer, Jews in Colonial Brazil, 88; Bloom, “A Study,” 90.
41. Contraband trade via Amsterdam was so popular that in 1662 Spanish trading galleons, despite a two-year absence from the New World, went home with their holds half full.
42. Dutch territory in northeast Brazil included the provinces of Pernambuco, Itamaraca, Paraíba, and Rio Grande do Norte.
43. Wiznitzer, Jews in Colonial Brazil, 88–89 (transcript of letter in Wiznitzer’s appendix).
44. Bloom, The Economic Activities of the Jews, 138, 138n.
45. Wiznitzer, Jews in Colonial Brazil, 93.
46. Ibid., 116–17.
47. Ibid., 95–96.
48. Bloom, “A Study,” 94.
49. Wiznitzer, Jews in Colonial Brazil, 98.
50. I. S. Emmanuel, “New Light on Early American Jewry,” American Jewish Archives 8 (1955), 11.
51. Ibid., 9–13: Abraham da Costa was the head of the Parnassim who signed the petition that resulted in the Patenta Onrossa. He was the younger brother of Uriel, who had killed himself after renouncing his heretic beliefs, and elder brother to Joseph, who would later refer to the Patenta Onrossa in the struggle to achieve civil rights in New Amsterdam.
52. Ibid., 43–44.
53. Arnold Wiznitzer, “Jewish Soldiers in Dutch Brazil (1630–1654),” Publications of the American Jewish Historical Society 46 (September 1956), 46.
54. Ibid., 48.
55. Bloom, “A Study,” 126.
56. Ibid.
57. Ibid., 137.
58. Ibid., 130–31.
59. Wiznitzer, Jews in Colonial Brazil, 108–9, 210: text of King John’s reply.
60. Roth, A History of the Marranos, 306: Portugal’s reconquest of Brazil was due in large part to him. Da Silva “provided ships, supplies, and munitions to the army.” After he was accused of judaizing, his trial dragged on for five years. Da Silva was finally freed after he appeared as a pentitent, and in 1662, the king sent him to England with Catherine of Braganza to administer her dowry. Though he remained in London, he never joined the now legal Jewish community.
61. Bloom, “A Study…” 136–37.
62. Simon Wolf, The American Jew as Patriot, Soldier and Citizen (Boston: Gregg Press, 1972), 449.
63. Wiznitzer, The Records of the Earliest Jewish Community, 55n44.
64. Liebman, “The Great Conspiracy in Peru,” 176–90; Liebman, The Jews in New Spain, 225–35.
65. They could settle in the six small Dutch islands of Aruba, Bonaire, Curaçao, Saba, St. Eustacius, and St. Martin, and although France and England were still off-limits, they were welcome in the French Caribbean islands Guadaloupe and Martinque, and the English colonies Barbados and Nevis.
Chapter Seven: Exodus to Heretic Island
1. Arnold Wiznitzer, “The Exodus from Brazil and Arrival in New Amsterdam of the Jewish Pilgrim Fathers in 1654,” Publications of the American Jewish Historical Society 44 (Philadelphia, September 1954), 80–97.
2. Captain Thomas Southey, Chronological History of the West Indies (London: Frank Cass & Co., 1968; reprint of 1827 edition): In 1568, the Crown accused the current heir, Don Luis Colón, of “blocking an investigation into charges the Admiral had used his private jurisdiction on Jamaica to cover illegal trade.” The charge was he imported more goods than the island needed for the sole purpose of exporting them to other colonies. This was in violation of the mercantile system that mandated first profits to the homeland, i.e., all goods had to come and go via Seville. Richard Bloome, A Description of the Island of Jamaica with the other Isles and Territories in America in which English are Related (London, 1672), 44: When the English conquered Jamaica, “the number of inhabitants did not exceed 3,000 of which half were slaves. And the reason why it was so thinly peopled was…chiefly because this isle was held in proprietorship by the heirs of Columbus who received the revenues and placed governors as absolute Lord of it. And at first it was planted by a kind of Portugals, the society of whom the Spaniard abhors.”
3. Francis J. Osborne, History of the Catholic Church in Jamaica (Chicago: Loyola University Press, 1988), 84: The synod decreed the Jamaican abbot should come under the jurisdiction of the archbishop of Santo Domingo on February 15, 1624.
4. Frank Cundall and Joseph Pietersz, Jamaica Under the Spaniards, abstracted from the Archives of Seville (Kingston: Institute of Jamaica, 1919), 17: Miguel Delgado, one of the Portugals who founded La Vega (Spanish Town) in 1534, was lieutenant governor in 1583; Morales, Spanish Jamaica, 86: Diego de Mercado ruled from 1583 to 1597. Prominent Jamaicans who bore those names were all of Jewish ancestry. See Jacob Andrade, A Record of the Jews of Jamaica (Kingston: Jamaica Times, 1941).
5. Cundall and Pietersz, Jamaica Under the Spaniards, 21, 26.
6. Ibid., 30.
7. Ibid., 30–31.
8. Ibid., 17–34. Melgarejo’s thirst for power exceeded his authority. Though loyal to the Crown, he had no qualms about feathering his own nest. After Philip II’s death in 1604, six merchants petitioned Philip III, accusing the governor of corruption, and “prayed he might be recalled.” They alleged he traded with foreign ships and pirates, “while taking for himself and his lieutenants all negroes and merchandise which entered the island.” However, the king was pleased with Melgarejo’s performance and appointed him to another term. When Melgarejo left office, Philip III, “on the petition of the people of Jamaica,” pardoned the illicit traders.
9. Ibid., 24.
10. Ibid., 47, 48: Jamaica’s governor tried, without success “to take from Francisco de Leyba Ysazi [sic] a tannery he has on the river which cause a lot of sickness being so near the town.”
11. Osborne, History of the Catholic Church in Jamaica, Appendix C, 445–76, lists the synod decrees. Don Nuño’s abbot, Mateo de Moreno, attended the synod, but the novice prelate was outmaneuvered by forces aligned against the Columbus family.
12. Cundall and Pietersz, Jamaica Under the Spaniards, 44–45; S.A.G. Taylor, The Western Design: An Account of Cromwell’s Expedition to the Caribbean (Kingston: Institute of Jamaica and Jamaican Historical Society, 1969), 74.
13. Robert F. Marx, Treasure Fleets of the Spanish Main (Cleveland: World Publishing Co., 1968), 4–5. Charles impatiently waited for the galleons: “The importance of the treasure from the New World to Spain can be readily understood from the following dispatch sent by the Venetian ambassador in Spain to the doge in September 1567:…‘there was great anxiety all over Spain over the delay of the arrival of the treasure fleet from the Indies and, when the Genoese bankers informed the King that unless the fleet reached port shortly, that they would be unable to negotiate any further loans for him, Philip II fell into such a state of shock that he had to be confined to bed by his physicians…I am happy to inform you that news has just arrived from Seville that the fleet has made port safely and there is now great rejoicing not only here in the Royal Court, but all over the land as well.’”
14. Irwin R. Blacker, ed., “The English Voyages of Sir Anthony Shirley,” cited in Richard Hakluyt, Principal Navigations, Voyages, Traffics and Discoveries of the English Nation, 1598–1600, vol. 3, 601 (New York: Viking Press, 1965), 294.
15. Shannon Miller, Invested with Meaning: The Raleigh Circle in the New World (Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 1998), 158.
16. Robert Lacey, Sir Walter Raleigh (New York: Athenaeum Press, 1974), 344–45: James handed Gondomar “a precise inventory of Raleigh’s ships, armaments, ports of call and estimated dates of arrival.”
17. Antonia Fraser, King James VI of Scotland, I of England, (New York: Random House, 1975), 375: “Gondomar demanded…an immediate audience with James. Assuming a lofty and insolent tone, he declared the King could not judge Raleigh as he had commissioned him and was surrounded by his friends. Rather Raleigh and his captains were pirates and must be sent in chains to Madrid to be hanged in the main square. James, angered by his friend’s audacity, threw his hat on the floor, clutched his hair, and shouted that might be justice in Spain but not in England. Gondomar sneered that there was indeed a difference between England and Spain in regards to piracy, and abruptly left the room. Buckingham, who had been present, sided with Gondomar.” Philip Gibbs, The Reckless Duke: The Romantic Story of the First Duke of Buckingham and the Stuart Court (New York: Harper and Brothers, 1931), 76: “[Gondomar’s] most insolent demands had a tone of imperial dignity. His manner was that of a man who moved the world. His confidence in himself and in his country gave strength to his diplomacy and majesty to his deportment.” Coffin, The Dukes of Buckingham, 71–72: After Raleigh’s beheading, Gondomar and the king made friends. Next to Buckingham, Gondomar was “the most frequent visitor to the King’s bed-chamber” 73: “Although Gondomar had captivated James, beyond Whitehall he was despised. Once, while passing a group of Englishmen in the litter that Buckingham had made the vogue, Gondomar was cursed by one who shouted, ‘There goeth the Devil in a dung cart!’” Fraser concludes (p. 375): He was “perhaps the most influential foreign ambassador ever to reside in England…With a folly bordering on madness James admitted to intimacy the most dangerous man with whom he ever had to deal.”
18. Most references to Columbus’s gold mine in Jamaica are found in Lord Clarendon’s papers kept at Oxford University’s Bodleian Library: Clarendon State Papers, vol. 1, no. 237, 14. Clarendon’s transcription of Hermyn’s “secret discoveries” includes a coded invasion plan of Jamaica, cryptic references to the location of the secret gold mine, and the promise by local “Portingals” to reveal this to their liberator.
19. Clarendon State Papers, vol. 1, no. 237, 14.
20. Roth, A History of the Marranos, 246. Although she said she would sooner enter a convent than marry a heretic, it is interesting to note “her confessor, Fra. Vincente de Rocamora, a Dominican friar famous for his ‘piety and eloquence,’ disappeared from Spain in 1643 and shows up in Amsterdam, under the name of Isaac, studying medicine and playing a prominent part in the general life of the Jewish community.”
21. J. H. Elliott, The Count-Duke of Olivares, The Statesman in an Age of Decline (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1986), 232: “The most perfidious of all heretics condemned by the church—namely the Jews” see page 10 for Olivares’s Jewish ancestry.
22. Jonathan I. Israel, Diasporas Within a Diaspora, Crypto Jews and the World’s Maritime Empires (1540–1740), Brill Series in Jewish Studies, ed. David S. Katz (Boston, 2002), 148: Olivares’ economic plan to recruit Portuguese conversos “had much to do with the absence of specific measures against Portuguese New Christians in the Indies in 1624.” Jonathan I. Israel, Empires and Entrepots: The Dutch, the Spanish Monarchy and the Jews, 1585–1713 (London: Hambledon Press, 1990): Accepting Olivares’s invitation, more than four thousand Portuguese conversos settled in Seville and Madrid. Among them was Moses Cohen Henriques, who figures later in the Columbus gold mine venture. By 1640, the Portuguese expatriates in Seville constituted nearly a quarter of the population. “They had grown rich on legal and illegal trade, lived bejeweled lives, dressed in fancy clothes…Their ostentatious life style aroused the resentment of the Spanish merchants who viewed the Portuguese as nouveau riche foreigners. The Portuguese conversos occupied positions that made them easy to hate.
“Olivares’ opponents said he had invited the wolves into the hen house…His financial advisor was a prominent ex-Jew from Amsterdam, and his council was dubbed his sinogoga… Right before his downfall, Olivares’ own converso heritage was exposed. The king…threatened that should he return to court, ‘the public will not be appeased unless you are turned over to the Inquisition.’ With this change in climate, the grudging tolerance the conversos were accorded came to an end. Most of the community Olivares fathered soon departed for freer lands. For five years, Olivares kept the Inquisition at bay. In the free trade atmosphere of new business and fresh capital, Spain prospered. Innovative Portuguese letters of exchange and credit made capital portable and goods transportable to ports everywhere. But in the end, the Inquisition triumphed. An auto da fe on July 4, 1632 signaled the end to Olivares’ scheme. Olivares looked on as six Portuguese confessed to judaizing… The Grand Inquisitor, from atop a platform at one end of the square, condemned the six (four men and two women) to the quemadero (the burning place)…later that month the nephews of Olivares’ financial advisor disappeared into the secret cells of the Inquisition. Months later they…confessed under torture to judaizing. The message was clear: Spain was not ready to bring back her Jews.”
23. Using Jamaica as his base, he intended to recruit additional settlers from the French islands and capture the rest of Spain’s New World empire. Sweden’s account of the treaty is found in Aron Rydfors, De diplomatiska forbindelserna mellan Sverige och England 1624–1630 (Uppsala: 1890), 100–113, trans. on request by Hans Linton, Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Stockholm.
24. Cundall and Pietersz, Jamaica Under the Spaniards, 39–40.
25. V. T. Harlow, “The Voyages of Captain William Jackson 1642–1645,” Camden Miscellany 13 (1923), 19.
26. Ibid., 20–21.
27. Cundall and Pietersz, Jamaica Under the Spaniards, 40: In October 1643, Governor Francisco Ladron de Zegama “died a prisoner without guards in his own house.”
28. John Taylor, Taylor’s History of his Life and Travels in America and other parts, with An Account with the most remarkable Transactions which Annuallie happened in his daies, vol. 2 (1688). See John Robertson, “An Untimely Victory: Reinventing the English Conquest of Jamaica in the 17th Century,” English Historical Review 117 (2002), 14: “In St. Mary, the Spanish settlers built a nunnery to mark their victory in a civil war with their Portuguese fellow colonists.”
29. Bryan Edwards, History of the British Colonies in the West Indies, vol. 2 (London: John Stockdale Pickadilly, 1801), 193. “The Jealousy occasioned by the revolution which had placed the Duke of Braganza on the throne of Portugal, caused the expulsion of almost all the colonists of that nation. When the British forces entered Spanist Town, they found 2000 houses but few inhabitants. The deserted house in the capital proved the want of tenants. This was due to the expulsion of Portuguese settlers.”
30. Carol S. Holzberg, Minorities and Power in a Black Society: The Jewish Community of Jamaica (Lanham, Md.: North-South Publishing, 1987), 16n: “15 or 20 years before British invasion…13 Portuguese families were expelled.”
31. I first came across Israel’s name in Captain Fonseca’s 1634 testimony before the Inquisition in Madrid. The spy listed Israel as “adjutant” (administrative officer) of the Recife-bound supply ships that allegedly were to stop off in Portugal, storm the Inquisition prison, and free the prisoners. Israel’s name also appears in the testimony of Abraham Bueno Henriques, a young Dutch Jew taken prisoner in the fighting in Brazil and sent to Lisbon for trial. W. Samuel, “Sir William Davidson, Royalist (1616–1689) and the Jews,” Transactions of the Jewish Historical Society of England 14 (July 1936), 49–50: In his confession to the Inquisitors, he noted that Abraham Israel was married to his niece. Since Israel’s full name “de Pisa” identifies him with Italy, and since the Bueno Henriques family also had links with that country, Samuel suggests that despite the commonality of the name Abraham Israel (one likely assumed by conversos upon their reversion to Judaism), the young prisoner was referring to his near kinsman Abraham Israel de Pisa. This relationship Samuel reinforces in the testimony of Sir William Davidson, who in urging the endenization [naturalization, or some rights of citizenship] of Daniel Bueno Henriques, a Barbados Jew, notes that Daniel Bueno Henriques is “a neir kinsman of the Portingall Merchand who goes for Jamaica for the discovery of the Myne ye know of.” However, the “neir kinsman” might just as likely have been Abraham Cohen, who was also an Henriques. My deduction is that all three were related. As Daniel M. Swetschinski has documented in his article “Kinship and Commerce: The Foundations of Portuguese Jewish Life in 17th Century Holland,” Studia Rosenthaliana 15, no. 1 (1981), 65, the partners in most business dealings were “almost inevitably related.”
32. Morris U. Schappes, ed., A Documentary History of the Jews in the United States, 1654–1875 (New York: Citadel Press, 1950), 1–2.
33. Arnold Wiznitzer, “The Exodus from Brazil,” 319–20: That some were left behind in Jamaica is documented in a “Letter of Protest of the States-General of the Netherlands to the King of Spain,” dated November 14, 1654.
34. Ibid., 320.
35. Schappes, Documentary History of the Jews, 5.
36. When the ship bearing the Company’s letter arrived in New Amsterdam granting the Jewish “boat people” admission, among its passengers were the sons of Cohen and Israel, Jacob and Isaac. Each was around thirty years old. Looking beyond the borders of New Amsterdam, the two friends applied for a license to trade for furs with the Indians, and Israel journeyed down to South River to barter for skins with the Delaware Indians. He returned with pelts, but their license was rejected, and only approved after Calvinists added their signatures. Hints of their characters are apparent in the court records: Cohen was charged with smuggling eleven carts of tobacco, and Israel with “punching [another Jew] in the face.” After securing rights for their people, the two wound up joining their fathers in Jamaica in the search for Columbus’s lost gold mine.
Chapter Eight: Cromwell’s Secret Agents
1. James Williamson, A Short History of British Expansion: The Old Colonial Empire (London: Macmillan, 1965), 249: The 1,500 ships were “double that of the English mercantile marine.”
2. Albert M. Hyamson, The Sephardim of England: A History of the Spanish and Portuguese Jewish Community, 1492–1951 (London: Methuen, 1951), 11: Daniel Cohen Henriques, aka Duarte Henriques Alvares from the Canaries, married a Jewess, Leila Henriques, in Amsterdam, and after their marriage they settled in England. “This was the first appearance in England of the well-known Sephardim family of Henriques.”
3. Antonia Fraser, Cromwell: The Lord Protector (New York: Alfred A Knopf, 1974), 521.
4. Ibid. Fraser wrote that the preparations were so secret that “one Scottish soldier involved wrote, ‘if he suspected his shirt knew of the plans, he would be compelled to burn it.’”
5. Ibid., 522.
6. Irene A. Wright, “The English Conquest of Jamaica,” The Camden Miscellany 13, (1924), 11, quotes the Spanish captain Julian de Castilla’s report on the invasion: “Among the prisoners taken was an English youth who begged for his life in Spanish. He stated he was General Robert’s interpreter…He said his Protector…had received into London the greater part of the Hebrews of Flanders and sold them one of the best quarters in the city, with a church for synagogue. He understood that these Jews had urged the dispatch of this fleet and advanced a great loan for its fitting out. It is not difficult to believe this, since the example of Brazil exhibits similar treasons and iniquities committed by this blind people out of the aversion they have for us.”
7. Most information on Carvajal is from Lucien Wolf, Transactions of the Jewish Historical Society of England 2 (1894), 14–46; and Lucien Wolf, “Crypto Jews Under the Commonwealth,” Transactions of the Jewish Historical Society of England 2 (1893–94), 55–88.
8. Fraser, Cromwell, 524.
9. S. A. G. Taylor, The Western Design: An Account of Cromwell’s Expedition to the Caribbean (Kingston: Institute of Jamaica and Jamaican Historical Society, 1969), 10.
10. Ibid., 16, 19.
11. Taylor, The Western Design, 34, 36.
12. Ibid., 36: Taylor quotes Henry Whistler, “Journal of the West Indian Expedition (1654–1655),” reprinted in Journal of the Institute of Jamaica 2 (Kingston, 1899).
13. Wright, “The Spanish Naratives of Santo Domingo, The Notarial Account,” The Camden Miscellany 13 (1924), 59: There is also the admission of a fourth prisoner: “he said their intention was to go to Jamaica.”
14. H. P. Jacobs, “Jamaica Historical Review,” Jamaica Historical Society 1, no. 1 (June 1945), 109–10.
15. Wright, “‘The English Conquest of Jamaica’ by Julian Castilla (1656),” The Camden Miscellany 13 (1924), 522.
16. John Elijah Blunt, The Jews of England (London: Saunders and Benning, 1830), 70–71: “The Rabbi’s extreme supporters embarrassed Cromwell when it was reported in the daily press that they had looked up his birth records to see if the Lord Protector was of the line of David and might himself be the Messiah!” When word of their investigation reached London, “Cromwell was suspected of being privy to their designs, and was exposed to raillery. At a meeting of the council the Jews were summoned…warmly upbraided and ordered to depart the country.”
17. Evidence that Carvajal and Acosta were Jews comes from their Jewish descendants resident in the Caribbean.
18. Taylor, The Western Design, 61.
19. C. A. Firth, ed., A Narrative by General Venables of His Expedition to the Island of Jamaica: with an Appendix of Papers Relating to the Expedition, Royal Historical Society (London, 1900). Venables’s report to Cromwell. Richard Hill, Jamaica’s foremost nineteenth-century historian, writes in Lights and Shadows of Jamaican History: Eight Chapters in the History of Jamaica (1508–1680) illustrating the settlement of the Jews on the island (1868), 35: “The family influence of Diego Columbus had rendered it very considerably Portuguese. Several Jewish families already here are progenitors of families still living and commenced the nucleus of Jewish influence so remarkable and so paramount in Jamaica at this day.”
20. Taylor, The Western Design, 63: When Duarte de Acosta, who was held by the English as a hostage, sent his slave with a message to his brother Gaspar, the slave was garroted as a spy. Acosta, “incensed” at the murder of his slave, went over to the English. Venables noted: “A good deal of information was obtained from Acosta.”
21. Wolf, “Crypto Jews Under the Commonwealth,” 56: De Caceres’s origins: born 1615 or 1623 in Amsterdam, died 1704 in England. He was the son of Moses de Casseres, one of the twelve founders of Neveh Shalom, and lived in Barbados from 1647 to 1654 and in Hamburg before he came to London. Maurice Woolf, “Foreign Trade of London Jews in the Sephardic Century,” Transactions of the Jewish Historical Society of England 24 (1970–73), 47: his family was from Caceres, in Spain, near the Portuguese border, where many Jews lived before the expulsion, on the same latitude as Toledo and Lisbon.
22. Lucien Wolf, “American Elements in the Resettlement,” Transactions of the Jewish Historical Society of England 3 (1896–98), 97–98, Appendix VII.
23. Thomas Carlyle, ed., Oliver Cromwell’s Letters and Speeches, A Library of Universal Literature (New York: P. F. Collier and Son, 1800), Part 2, 428.
24. W. S. Samuel, “A List of Jews Endenzation and Naturalization 1609–1799,” Transactions of the Jewish Historical Society of England 2 (1968–69), 113.
25. Lucien Wolf, “Cromwell’s Jewish Intelligencers,” Essays in Jewish History (1934), 103: “sends first authentic warning of treaty…the text of which he conveys ‘is kept very close’ but he obtained a copy for 20 [pounds].” Source—Birch: Thurloe Papers, v. 645. March 56, Blake sailed from England to blockade Cádiz. When the galleons arrived, he captured six of the eight ships and two million pieces of eight, and the following year burned or sank the Spanish fleet in Tenerife in the Canary Islands. This ended all hope of sending an expedition to the West Indies in the fall to retake Jamaica.
26. Wolf, “Cromwell’s Jewish Intelligencers,” 112.
27. Wolf, “Crypto Jews Under the Commonwealth,” 56.
28. Interesting Tracts Relating to the Island of Jamaica which throw great light on the history of that island from its conquest down through the year 1702 (St. Jago de la Vega, 1702), 1–2: “A Proclamation of the Protector, Relating To Jamaica: we therefore,…[decree] that every planter or adventurer to that island shall be…free from paying any excise or custom for any…goods or necessaries which he or they shall transport to the island of Jamaica…for a space of ten years.”
29. Anita Libman Lebeson, Pilgrim People (New York: Harper and Brothers, 1950), 48–49; Arnold Wiznitzer, Jews in Colonial Brazil (New York: Columbia University Press, 1960), 174–75.
30. Fraser, Cromwell, 566.
31. Ibid., 561; Bernard Martin, A History of Judaism, vol. 2 (New York: Basic Books, 1974), 163.
32. Lucien Wolf, Menasseh Ben Israel’s Mission to Oliver Cromwell (London: Macmillan, 1901), 78–79: Text of Menasseh’s address to Cromwell. Along with fulfilling the Messianic requisite, Menasseh noted: “Profit is the most powerful motive all the world prefers before all things,” and stressed the wealth their return would create. There is no record of what they discussed when they met, but it is easy to imagine a lively volley of opinions on Scripture, prophecy, and trade. Menasseh, in addressing him, assumed “a most submissive and obsequious posture imaginable,” but was quick to remind the Protector of the fate of leaders who treated Jews harshly: “No monarch has ever brought suffering to Jews without eventually being heavily punished by God.”
33. D’Blossiers Tovey, Anglia Judaica: A History of the Jews in England (1738); retold by Elizabeth Pearl (London: Weidenfeld and Nicolson, 1990), 143–44.
34. Wolf, “Crypto Jews Under the Commonwealth,” 64. London Jews petition Cromwell: “to shelter himself from those tyrannical proceedings and enjoy those benefits and kindness which this commonwealth afforded to afflicted strangers as yr Highness hath bin pleased to show yourself on behalf of the Jews.”
35. Ibid., 65.
36. Ibid., 66.
37. Gilbert Burnet, Osmund Airy, ed., A History of My Own Time, vol. 1 (London: Company of Booksellers, 1725), 76.
38. Carlyle, ed., Oliver Cromwell’s Letters, vol. 22, 427–30.
39. Thomas Birch, ed., A Collection of State Papers of John Thurloe, Esq. Secretary, First to the Council of State to the Two Protectors Oliver and Richard Cromwell (London, 1742), vol. 4, 543–44: Sabada’s journal entry dated February 1, 1656.
40. State Papers of Thurloe #4, 602.
41. Wolf, “Crypto-Jews Under the Commonwealth,” 56.
42. Wolf, “American Elements in the Resettlement,” 96–97, Appendix VII, Invasion of Chile letter: Simon de Caceres’s scheme for the conquest of Chile. Carlyle, Cromwell’s Letters and Speeches, vol. 3, 131; Wolf, “Cromwell’s Jewish Intelligencers,” 108–9.
43. Cecil Roth, History of the Jews in England (London: Clarendon Press, 1964), 56.
44. Woolf, “Foreign Trade of London Jews,” 47. Samuel Tolkowsky, They Took to the Sea (London: Thomas Yoseloff, 1964), 245: In April 1661, the king of Denmark endorsed the Caceres brothers’ request to Charles II to live and trade in Barbados and Suriname.
45. Jonathan I. Israel, Diasporas Within a Diaspora, 1540–1740, Brill Series in Jewish Studies (Boston: E. J. Brill, 2002), 298–99, quoting Simon De Vries, Historie van Barbaryen: From 1626, when the port city of Salé, Morocco, just north of Rabat, formed “a self-governing pirate republic,” the leaders and financial backers of the corsairs were “a small resident community of Portuguese Jews from Amsterdam [who] divided between them the captured booty taken from Christians.” The States General, in a dispatch to Morocco’s sultan, identified two familiar names, Moses Cohen Henriques and Aaron Querido, as “prominent” traders who supplied arms and munitions to Salé. Other familiar figures were the sons of the Palache brothers, members of the Bueno Mesquita family, and Moses’s cousin, Benjamin Cohen Henriques, described in 1634 as Salé’s “pre-eminent resident Dutch Jewish merchant.” Peter Lamborn Wilson, Pirate Utopias: Moorish Corsairs and European Renegadoes (New York: Autonomedia, 2003), 73.
46. Richard Hill, Lights and Shadows of Jamaica History (Kingston, Jamaica: Ford & Gall, 1859), 37: “The Jewish families laid the foundation of the trade and traffic of Jamaica as soon as mercantile business became organized with the Freebooters. With the Jewish settlers, properly opens the connexion of the colony with the Buccaneers.”
Chapter Nine: The Golden Dream of Charles II
1. Benjamin Keen, ed. and trans., The Life of Admiral Christopher Columbus by His Son Ferdinand (New Brunswick, N.J.: Rutgers University Press, 1992), li: As Columbus wrote in his Book of Prophecies: “O, most excellent gold! Who has gold gets what he wants, imposes his will on the world, and helps souls to paradise.”
2. Isaac S. and Suzanne A. Emmanuel, History of the Jews of the Netherlands Antilles (Cincinnati: American Jewish Archives, 1970), 40–43.
3. Samuel Oppenheim, “An Early Jewish Colony in Western Guiana and Its Relation to the Jews of Suriname, Cayenne and Tobago,” Publications of the American Jewish Historical Society 16 (1907), 108–9.
4. Emmanuel, History of the Jews of the Netherlands Antilles, 44: In 1659, David Cohen Nassi, who contracted with the Company to found a Jewish colony in Cayenne, bought “52 negro slaves from Abraham Cohen do Brazil who had paid the Company 2995.50 florins cash for them and he would reimburse Cohen within three years.” Zvi Loker, Jews in the Caribbean: Evidence on the History of the Jews in the Caribbean Zone in Colonial Times (Jerusalem: Misgav Yerushalayim, Institute for Research on the Sephardi and Oriental Jewish Heritage, 1991), 59–60: In August 1659, Abraham Cohen and A. Luis, merchants in Amsterdam, ship “goods and passengers” to Cayenne with the agreement of the West India Company; in November 1659, Abraham Cohen and A. Luis, acting under Power of Attorney of the New Cayenne Company, send the ship Abrahmas Offerhande “laden with wares” to Cayenne. March, 3 1660: “Abraham Cohen chartered the Hamburch to ship cargo and several Jews to Curacao and Cayene” May 1660: “A. Cohen to ship to A. Luis \ part of his property from the island ‘Ayami’ on the river in the wasteland of the Wild Coast.”
5. Loker, Jews in the Caribbean, 107.
6. Emmanuel, History of the Jews of the Netherlands Antilles, 43.
7. Brian Masters, The Mistresses of Charles II (London: Blond and Briggs, 1979), 45.
8. Jean Plaidy, The Wandering Prince (New York: Fawcett, 1971), 164–65.
9. Quoted in Antonia Fraser, Royal Charles (New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1979), 139, 173.
10. See http://www.contemplator.com/england/phoenix.htm.
11. Fraser, Royal Charles, 139.
12. Masters, The Mistresses of Charles II, 45.
13. Ibid., 47.
14. A. G. Course, A Seventeenth-Century Mariner (London: Frederick Muller Ltd., 1965), 24–26.
15. Cecil Roth, History of the Jews in England (London: Clarendon Press, 1964), 167.
16. Lucien Wolf, “The Jewry of the Restoration,” Transactions of the Jewish Historical Society of England 5 (1896–98), 13.
17. Lucien Wolf, “Status of the Jews in England After the Resettlement,” Transactions of the Jewish Historical Society of England 4 (1899–1901), 181–82.
18. Ibid., 182.
19. Edgar R. Samuel, “David Gabay’s 1660 Letter from London,” Transactions of the Jewish Historical Society of England 25 (1973–75), 38–42.
20. Antonia Fraser, Royal Charles, 195: Fraser quotes an entry in Calendar of State Papers, Domestic Series, Charles II, no. 140, November 30, 1660.
21. Roth, History of the Jews in England, 160–61.
22. Wolf, “The Jewry of the Restoration,” 15: María Fernandez de Carvajal, née Rodrigues, was maternal aunt of Antonio Rodrigues Lindo (brother of Lorenzo), who was arrested in Lisbon for Judaizing when he was twenty-three in 1660. Of María, a tough gal—“when the community was threatened in 1660, she called a meeting of her co-religionists at her house in Leadenhall St, that petitioned Charles II for ‘his Majesty’s protection to continue and reside in his dominions.’”
23. Wolf, “The Jewry of the Restoration,” 15–16: While Charles hadn’t yet formally sanctioned their presence, he had reason to. While most Jews sided with the Protector, others in Amsterdam and London, led by the da Costa family, were sympathetic to his cause. Reportedly, they advanced Charles one million guiders (about $600,000). Thus, while Cromwell had his Jewish intelligencers, other Jews supported the exiled king.
24. Calendar of State Papers, Colonial Series, America and West Indies, 1661–1668 (National Archives, Kew, Surrey, England), 7/24/1661 #139: In April 1661, Charles approved their petition to live and trade in Barbados and Suriname, endorsed by the king of Denmark.
25. Within two years after his restoration, the number of London Jews holding bank accounts increased from thirty-five to ninety-two.
26. Albert M. Hyamson, The Sephardim of England: A History of the Spanish and Portuguese Jewish Community, 1492–1951 (London: Methuen, 1951), 19.
27. Yosef Kaplan, Jews and Conversos: Studies in Society and the Inquisition (Jerusalem: Magnes Press, 1981), 214, 221.
28. Calender of State Papers, Colonial America and West Indies, 1661–1668, no. 216, 69.
29. Charles II’s contract with Abraham Israel de Piso and Abraham Cohen, Egerton MSS., folios 152b–158b, British Museum.
30. Domestic Entry Book, Charles II, vol. 14, 57, National Archives, Kew, Surrey, England.
31. Samuel, “Sir William Davidson, Royalist,” 46.
32. Nigel Cawthorne, Sex Lives of the Kings and Queens of England (Chicago: Trafalgar Square, 1997), 72.
33. Samuel, “Sir William Davidson, Royalist,” 46.
34. Herbert Friedenwald, “Material for the History of the Jews in the British West Indies,” Publications of the American Jewish Historical Society 5 (1897), 69, transcribes the letter as “the gold finding Jew left…here ore and directions to find the gold.” Samuel transcribes the same passage as “care and directions…”
35. Nuala Zahedieh, “The Capture of the Blue Dove, 1664: Policy, Profits and Protection in Early English Jamaica,” in R. McDonald, ed., West Indies Accounts: Essays on the History of the British Caribbean and the Atlantic Economy (Kingston: University of the West Indies Press, 1996), 29–47.
Chapter Ten: Buccaneer Island
1. S. A. G. Taylor, The Western Design: An Account of Cromwell’s Expedition to the Caribbean (Kingston: Institute of Jamaica and Jamaican Historical Society, 1969), 111–12.
2. C. H. Haring, The Buccaneers in the West Indies in the XVII Century (Hamden, Conn.: Archon Books, 1966; reprint of 1910 edition), 92; Dudley Pope, The Buccaneer King: The Biography of the Notorious Sir Henry Morgan, 1635–1688 (New York: Dodd, Mead, 1978), 74.
3. Taylor, The Western Design, 113.
4. Ibid., 118.
5. Michael Pawson and David Buisseret, Port Royal, Jamaica (Oxford, U.K.: Clarendon Press, 1975), 62.
6. S. A. G. Taylor, ed., “Edward D’Oyley’s Journal,” part 2, transcribed by F. J. Osbourne, Jamaican Historical Review, vol. XI, 1978, 69: In September 1657, D’Oyley wrote the Committee of Officers and Merchants: “I am sending to Hispaniola for about 250 buccaneers, vizt. French and English that kill cattle who would come to us if they might have that liberty which I intend to give them.”
7. Taylor, The Western Design, 133.
8. Ibid., 141–42: Privateers were empowered to attack Spanish ships. By attacking Spanish settlements rather than Spanish ships, they did not have to fork over some of the loot to the licensing authorities.
9. Pawson and Buisseret, Port Royal, Jamaica, 80.
10. Ibid., 131.
11. Pope, The Buccaneer King, 77.
12. Taylor, The Western Design, 205; Pope, The Buccaneer King, 80.
13. Pawson and Buisseret, Port Royal, Jamaica, 220.
14. Haring, The Buccaneers in the West Indies, 109.
15. Ibid., 110.
16. Pawson and Buisseret, Port Royal, Jamaica, 97.
17. Ibid., 99.
18. Ibid., 83.
19. Calendar of State Papers, Colonial Series, America & West Indies, 1901, 593: January 28, 1692, the president of the Council of Jamaica to the Lords of Trade and Plantations: “The Jews eat us and our children out of all trade, the reasons for naturalizing them not having been observed; for there has been no regard had to their settling and planting as the law directed…they have made Port Royal their Goshen and will do nothing but trade…This is a great and growing evil.”
20. Pope, The Buccaneer King, 86.
21. Salvador de Madariaga, The Rise of the Spanish American Empire (New York: Free Press, 1965), 162.
22. Pawson and Buisseret, Port Royal, Jamaica, 119.
23. H. R. Allen, Buccaneer: Admiral Sir Henry Morgan (London: Arthur Barker Ltd., 1976), 23.
24. Quoted in Clinton Black, Port Royal (Kingston: Bolivar Press, 1970), 21.
25. Alexander Winston, Pirates and Privateers (London: Arrow Books, 1972), 30; a reprint of No Purchase, No Pay (London: Eyre & Spottiswoode Ltd., 1970), one of the best books on buccaneers.
26. Philip Lindsay, The Great Buccaneer (London: Peter Neville Ltd., 1950), 103.
27. Pope, The Buccaneer King, 163.
28. Pawson and Buisseret, Port Royal, Jamaica, 119.
29. John Esquemelin, The Buccaneers of America. A true account of the most remarkable assaults committed of the late years upon the coasts of the West Indies by the Buccaneers of Jamaica and Tortuga by John Esquemelin One of the Buccaneers who was present at those tragedies (New York: Dover Publications, 1967), 65–69.
30. Stephen Alexander Fortune, Merchants and Jews: The Struggle for British West Indian Commerce, 1650–1750 (Gainesville: University of Florida Press, 1984), 35.
31. Zvi Loker, Jews in the Caribbean: Evidence on the History of the Jews in the Caribbean Zone in Colonial Times (Jerusalem: Misgav Yerushalayim, Institute for Research on the Sephardi and Oriental Jewish Heritage, 1991), 164–67; best one-stop source of period documents.
32. Egerton MSS., folios 152b–185b, British Museum.
33. Calendar of State Papers, Colonial Series, America & West Indies, 1669–1674, 7, no. 968, 15-11-1672. Petition of Rabba Couty to the King; vol. 9, no. 306, 22-21-1672: The King to Sir Thomas Lynch re: Rabba Couty.
34. Loker, Jews in the Caribbean, 181.
35. Ibid., 177–82; Richard Hill, Lights and Shadows of Jamaica History (Kingston, Jamaica: Ford & Gall, 1859), 120–21.
36. Hill, Lights and Shadows, 125, cites: Appendix to the Journals of the Assembly, 22 Charles II. A. 1670.
37. Pope, The Buccaneer King, 23; Winston, Pirates and Privateers, 37.
38. Allen, Buccaneer: Admiral Sir Henry Morgan, 131.
39. Ibid., 75; Pope, The Buccaneer King, 106, 155.
40. Allen, Buccaneer: Admiral Sir Henry Morgan, 75.
41. Carl and Roberta Bridenbaugh, No Peace Beyond the Line: The English in the Caribbean, 1624–1690 (New York: Oxford University Press, 1972), 170.
42. Lindsay, The Great Buccaneer, 103–5.
43. Ibid., 106.
44. Ibid., 106–7.
45. Ibid., 151.
46. Ibid., 108.
47. Pope, The Buccaneer King, 215.
48. Lindsay, The Great Buccaneer, 112.
49. Winston, Pirates and Privateers, 88.
50. Ibid., 87.
51. Lindsay, The Great Buccaneer, 177.
52. Pope, The Buccaneer King, 257.
53. Calendar of State Papers, Colonial Series, America & West Indies, 1669–1674, 27, no. 697, 17-14-1671.
54. Nuala Zahedieh, “The Merchants of Port Royal, Jamaica, and the Spanish Contraband Trade, 1655–1692,” William and Mary Quarterly, 3rd ser., 43, no. 3 (1986), 580.
55. Israel, Diasporas Within a Diaspora, 443: “A bitter quarrel erupted in the mid 1670’s pitted Barbary Jews residing in Tangiers against Abraham Cohen, who they complained, ‘did continually affront, molest and disquiet them that they could not attend to their callings.’”
56. Zahedieh, “The Merchants of Port Royal,” 575.
57. Ibid., 581–82.
58. Calendar of State Papers, 1669–1672, 28, no. 63, 11-6-1672, Petition of the Merchants of Port Royal to Sir Thos. Lynch, Governor of Jamaica. Full transcript in Hill, Lights and Shadows, 124–25.
59. Calendar of State Papers, Colonial Series, America & West Indies, 1669–1672, no. 999, 453.
60. Fortune, Merchants and Jews, 26–27; Gedalia Yogev, Diamonds and Coral: Anglo-Dutch Jews and 18th Century Trade (Leicester, U.K.: Leicester University Press, 1978), 28–60: Statistics show Jamaica’s Jews were of major financial value to England.
61. Winston, Pirates and Privateers, 89.
62. Pope, The Buccaneer King, 263.
63. Ibid., 262.
64. Ibid.
65. Ibid., 268.
66. Calendar of State Papers, 1668–1674, no. 503, 552: Council of Jamaica petitioned the Royal African Company “demanding more slaves.” The Company replied, “On January, 1674…seven ships had been sent to Jamaica with 2320 negroes and in 1676 four more ships with 1660 negroes and 1540 sent in November 1676.”
67. Cohen Abraham to Moses Cohen Henriques, signed May 5, 1675, Spanish Town Record Office, Liber 6, 1674, no. 232.
68. Spanish Town Record Office, Liber 6, no. 275, July 1675, Sept. 8, 1675 sells land to Mathew Mattson of Port Royal, witnessed by Humphrey Knollis and Thomas Helyar.
69. Moses Cohen naturalization, Spanish Town Record Office, Liber 13, 1681, no. 220.
70. Henry Barnham, An account of the Island of Jamaica, from the time of the Spaniards first discovery to the year 1722 (London), British Library, Sloane Ms 3918, 6. When Morgan was in England, the then nineteen-year-old Christopher Albemarle was the buccaneer’s sidekick. Half Morgan’s age, he hero-worshipped his elder, being himself a wild youth given to drink, frequenting brothels, and enjoying sordid escapades that owing to his aristocratic status were excused, even admired.
71. Beeston sold the first land to Daniel Naharr, May 17, 1693 (Liber 24 of deeds folio 46) and subsequently Jews bought sixteen of the 270 lots of land sold in 1693–1702.
72. Fortune, Merchants and Jews, 65.
73. The following names are from Leon Huhner, “Jews Interested in Privateering in America during the 18th century,” Publication of the American Jewish Historical Society 23 (1915), 163–77: Isaac Hart: In 1758, during the French and Indian War, one of Newport’s foremost citizens and wealthiest merchants, Isaac Hart, owned and fitted out two ships—the General Webb and the Lord Howe—that saw action. Napthali Hart: Also of Newport, he owned and equipped the Dolphin and the Diamond, which sailed for the British in the American Revolution.
Facing the world’s finest navy, Congress in March 23, 1776, commissioned privateers “to capture all ships and cargoes belonging to Great Britain taken on the high seas.” They include four of the founders of Mikve Israel in Philadelphia: Benjamin Sexias, the brother of the New York rabbi Gershon M. Seixas, co-owner with Isaac Moses of the Fox, a brig with eight guns. Moses also owned the Marbois, a brig of sixteen guns and a crew of eighty-five. Abe Sasportas owned Two Rachels, a brigantine of eight guns. Michael Gratz was a partner with Carter Braxton, a signer of the Declaration of Independence, but no names of their vessels are known. Mendes fils Cadet of Portsmouth, New Hampshire, master of the Wilks, a sloop of ten guns and a crew of sixty, co-owned with Gideon Samson of Exeter. Moses M. Hays, a leading citizen of Boston and uncle of Judah Touro, owned Iris, a brig of eight guns. Robert Morris, the financier of the Revolution, and Moses Levy, one of the three buyers of land for the Newport synagogue, jointly owned Havannah, a schooner of six guns. Morris also owned Black Prince, a brig of twelve guns, with Isaac Moses of Philadelphia.
74. Bertram Wallace Korn, The Early Jews of New Orleans (Waltham, Mass.: American Jewish Historical Society, 1969), quoting from The Journal of Jean Lafitte (New York, 1958), 98–99.
Epilogue: Searching for the Lost Mine of Columbus
1. Calendar of State Papers, Colonial Series, America & West Indies, 1661–1668, nos. 948, 949 (March 1, 1664).
2. Jacob Andrade, A Record of the Jews in Jamaica (Kingston: Jamaica Times, 1941), 139: The same date—March 25, 1670—Cohen bought valley land, Solomon de Léon purchased nine hundred acres in the same area.
3. Frank Cundall and Joseph Pietersz, Jamaica Under the Spaniards, abstracted from the Archives of Seville (Kingston: Institute of Jamaica, 1919), 49.