Nadene Goldfoot
Bavaria, the blue most southern area of GermanyBavarians are an ethnographic group of Germans of the Bavaria region, a state within Germany. The group's dialect or speech is known as the Bavarian language, native to Altbayern ("Old Bavaria"), roughly the territory of the Electorate of Bavaria in the 17th century.
Like the neighboring Austrians, Bavarians are traditionally Catholic. and the center-right Christian Social Union in Bavaria (successor of the Bavarian People's Party of 1919–1933) has traditionally been the strongest party.
The history of Bavaria stretches from its earliest settlement and its formation as a stem duchy in the 6th century (500s) through its inclusion in the Holy Roman Empire to its status as an independent kingdom and finally as a large Bundesland (state) of the Federal Republic of Germany.
It is now thought that the tribal ethnicity was established by the process of ethnogenesis, whereby an ethnic identity is formed because political and social pressures make a coherent identity necessary.
Romans subdued Celts just before the commencement of the Christian era, The Bavarians, mostly Celts, soon came under the dominion of the Franks, probably without a serious struggle.
Firstly the Roman aristocracy had acquired almost all of the prime agricultural land of the empire, forcing out the independent small farmers who have always formed the backbone of the infantry. Through the use of slave labour they made independent agriculture uneconomical.
Secondly they passed laws forcing the children to work at the same jobs as their parents. So only the children of soldiers could become soldiers.
Thirdly it was then, as now, cheaper to hire soldiers from barbarian cultures than employ Romans who would demand their rights as citizens. Fourthly the employment of barbarian mercenaries was a subsidy to the leaders of the tribe they came from to keep the peace. Those leaders were paid, not the soldiers themselves, who only got what their leaders chose to trickle down. They also granted those leaders titles which reinforced their authority within the tribe and kept them in power. The Bavarians, in fact all Germans, were conditioned to become soldiers.
Jews of Bavaria, there since the 10th century, faced a history of being expelled from the land constantly. BAVARIA became Land in S. Germany, including Franconia. Jews are first mentioned there in the *Passau toll regulations of 906. Their settlement was apparently connected with the trade routes to Hungary, southern Russia and northeastern Germany. A Jewish resident of *Regensburg is mentioned at the end of the tenth century. The communities which had been established in *Bamberg and Regensburg were attacked during the First Crusade in 1096, and the German Crusade massacres of Jews in European towns were also going on in this year. Also, those Jews in *Aschaffenburg , *Wuerzburg , and *Nuremberg during the Second Crusade in 1146–47 had been attacked. Other communities existed in the 13th century at Landshut, Passau, *Munich , and *Fuerth .
Interesting that the Jews of Austria were not expelled until 1421.
The Jews in Bavaria mainly engaged in trade and moneylending. In 1276 they were expelled from Upper Bavaria and 180 Jews were burned at the stake in Munich following a *blood libel in 1285.
The communities in Franconia, a part of Bavaria, were attacked during the *Rindfleisch persecutions in 1298. The *Armleder massacres, charges of desecrating the *Host at *Deggendorf , Straubing, and Landshut, and the persecutions following the *Black Death (1348–49), brought catastrophe to the whole of Bavarian Jewry. Many communities were entirely destroyed, among them *Ansbach , Aschaffenburg, *Augsburg , Bamberg, *Ulm , Munich, Nuremberg, Passau, Regensburg, *Rothenburg , and Wuerzburg. Those who had fled were permitted to return after a time under King Wenceslaus.
In 1442 the Jews were again expelled from Upper Bavaria. Shortly afterward, in 1450, the Jews in Lower Bavaria were flung into prison until they paid the duke a ransom of 32,000 crowns and were then driven from the duchy. As a result of agitation by the Franciscan John of *Capistrano , they were expelled from Franconia. In 1478 they were expelled from Passau, in 1499 from Nuremberg, and in 1519 from Regensburg. The few remaining thereafter in the duchy of Bavaria were expelled in 1551 and not allowed back into Bavaria until the 18th century.
Subsequently, Jewish settlement in Bavaria ceased until toward the end of the 17th century, when a small community was founded in *Sulzbach by refugees from *Vienna .
During the War of the Spanish Succession (1701–14) several Jews from Austria serving as purveyors to the army or as moneylenders settled in Bavaria. In this period a flourishing community grew up in Fuerth, whose economic activities helped to bring prosperity to the city.
After the war the Jews of Austrian origin were expelled from Bavaria, but some were able to acquire the right to reside in Munich as monopoly holders, *Court Jews , mintmasters, and physicians. Several Court Jews belonging to the Frankel and *Model families.
In the first half of the 19th century (1800s) unfavorable conditions prevailed for Jews in Bavaria which led to a particularly large Jewish emigration to the USA.
In the reaction which followed World War I there was a new wave of antisemitism, and in 1923 most of the East European Jews resident in Bavaria were expelled. This was the time when the National Socialist Movement made its appearance in the region, and antisemitic agitation increased. Jewish ritual slaughter (koshrut) was prohibited in Bavaria in 1931, a first step in anti-Semitic acts to those remaining.
In 1990, 5,000 Jews were living in Bavaria. New conditions in the world drew them back.
The oldest vestiges of a Jewish presence in Germany are found in the Rhineland. Cities like Speyer and Mainz had larger populations.
Resource:
https://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/bavaria-germany
The New Standard Jewish Encyclopedia
https://jguideeurope.org/en/region/germany/the-rhineland-and-bavaria/
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