The Rabbi Pirate

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An archive of original unpublished documents related to the trial, in London, of Samuel Pallache, on charges of committing "pyracie, spoyle and outrage at sea", in 1614-1615.

SKU: 35651 标签: , , Type:

PALLACHE, Don Samuel [aka Morenu ha-Rav Shemuel PALACHI]
[Various,
1376-1615].
Folio (423 by 327mm). 20 original manuscript pen and ink documents, on vellum and paper, pasted into nineteenth century album, quarter calf, gilt.
35651

To scale:

notes:

notes:

"Pyracie Spoyle and Outrage at Sea" : the Trials and Tribulations of Samuel Pallache: triple agent, envoy, merchant, peace negotiator, Rabbi, privateer, pirate.

This archive, the majority of which is unpublished, offers a unique and richly documented window onto the career of Samuel Pallache (d.1616), the Fez-born Jewish rabbi, merchant and diplomat who stood at the centre of one of the earliest, and long-lasting, treaties of friendship and free trade concluded b...

bibliography:

bibliography:

References:

Abrahams, 'Two Jews before the Privy Council and an English Law Court in 1614-15', in 'The Jewish Quarterly Review', Vol. 14, No. 2 (Jan., 1902), pp. 354-358. Including two documents from the 'Acts of Privy Council', also included here

Castries, 'Les sources inédites de l'histoire du Maroc de 1530 à 1844' (1850-1927)

Gans, 'Don Samuel Palache as Teacher and Pirate, Founder of Our Community', (c.1977)

Garcia-Arenal and Wigers, 'A Man of Three Worlds' (1999)

Israel, 'The Jews of Spanish North Africa, 1600—1669', in 'Transactions & Miscellanies (Jewish Historical Society of England)', Vol. 26 (1974-1978), pp. 71-86

Prins, 'De vestiging der Marranen in Noord‑Nederland in de 16de eeuw' (1927)

Ruiz Ferndandez, 'England and Spain in the Early Modern Era' (2019)

Sharp, Rev., Samuel, in 'The True Travels, Adventures and Observations of Captain John Smith' (1630). "Thames, Gravesend, England April 5, 1629 along with five other ships, Four Sisters, Lyon, the Lyon's Whelp, the Mayflower and the Talbot, arriving in Salem June 1629"

Zwarts, 'De eerste Rabbijnen en Synagogen van Amsterdam' (1929)

provenance:

provenance:

Provenance:

With the library label of Mozes Haimen Gans on the inside front cover. Thence by descent.

Mozes ("Max") Haiman Gans (1917–1987), Dutch author, journalist, and jeweller. In 1943 Max Gans managed to escape to Switzerland, where he founded the Joodse Coördinatie Commissie in Genève, which acted on behalf of the Dutch Jews under Nazi occupation. Upon his return to Amsterdam, he took over the jeweller's shop 'Premsela & Hamburger' from his father-in-law, who had been killed in a Nazi concentration camp, and wrote the standard reference work on antique silver. Max was active in Jewish affairs, becoming the head of the Central Committee for Jewish Education of the Netherlands Ashkenazi Congregation (NIK) and, in 1950, assistant editor and then, from 1956 to 1966, the editor of the Dutch Jewish Weekly 'Nieuw Israelitisch Weekblad' (NIW).

A private collector of Judaica, Gans published in 1971 his monumental 'Memorbook, A Pictorial History of Dutch Jewry from the Middle Ages to 1940', with some 1,100 illustrations. An English translation was published in 1977. In addition, he published three smaller albums on the Amsterdam Jewish quarter before 1940 and after – all of which were also translated into English. In 1976–77 he held the appointment of Professor Extraordinary in Dutch Jewish history at the University of Leiden.

Exhibited:

Victoria and Albert Museum, London, 1956 on the occasion of the 300th anniversary of the Jewish community in England, item 54.

Publication:

All but two documents are unpublished - items 14 and 16, which appear in Abrahams, 'Two Jews...' (1902).