Born amidst the ruins of war out of religious hatred and economic need, the Venetian Ghetto was the first time the entire Jewish population of a city would be confined to a specified area. Forced into cramped, unsanitary conditions, its inhabitants were systematically extorted, robbed, and subjected to countless humiliating restrictions. It became the prototype for ghettos throughout Europe and inspired a more vicious and enduring form of anti-Semitism.
Yet, as this book reveals, the Ghetto's story is also a testament of hope. Despite all that they faced down the centuries, its inhabitants not only survived - but thrived. The Venetian ghetto was a microcosm for both of Jewish diasporas and of huge shifts taking place across centuries and continents - and the book explores how one specific part of one specific city in Europe tells us about huge migratory shifts, about war and politics and piracy, about trade and global networks of capitalism, about the flourishing and transformation of culture and religion.
Authoritative, detailed, and incomparably human, Alexander Lee's book is a comprehensive portrait of the Ghetto from the arrival of the first Jews in the Venetian lagoon to its dissolution by Napoleon - and on, down to the present day. Lee brings the Ghetto's inhabitants to life with vivid immediacy and offers both a fitting monument to the Ghetto's past - and a powerful warning to the future.