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  2. History of the Jews in the Ottoman Empire - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_the_Jews_in_the...

    Sephardic Jews did not envision Palestine as the seat of Jewish governance and autonomy in the immediate aftermath of World War I. Sa'adi Levy, who lived in Salonica, owned a printing press in Amsterdam that published newspapers in Ladino and French covering the rival ideological claims and intellectual controversies of the day: Ottoman ...

  3. History of the Jews in İzmir - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_the_Jews_in_İzmir

    The first significant influx of Jews came in the 1630s. [6] In the late 16th century, a Sephardic community began to emerge, composed of Jews from Spain, Portugal, Asia, North Africa, and Venice. However, Ottoman records from this period provide limited evidence of an organized Jewish community in İzmir.

  4. Eastern Sephardim - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eastern_Sephardim

    The presence of Sephardim and New Christians along the Malabar coast eventually aroused the ire of the Catholic Church, which then obtained permission from the Portuguese crown to establish the Goan Inquisition against the Sephardic Jews of India. In recent times, principally after 1948, most Eastern Sephardim have relocated to Israel, and ...

  5. Sabbateans - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sabbateans

    Sabbatai Zevi was a Sephardic ordained rabbi from Smyrna (now İzmir, Turkey). [5] [6] A kabbalist of Romaniote origin, [7] Zevi, who was active throughout the Ottoman Empire, claimed to be the long-awaited Jewish Messiah. He was the founder of the Sabbatean movement, whose followers subsequently were to be known as Dönmeh "converts" or crypto ...

  6. Ahrida Synagogue of Istanbul - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ahrida_Synagogue_of_Istanbul

    [clarification needed] Sephardi Jews arrived in the Ottoman Empire from the Iberian Peninsula beginning in 1492, and soon were a larger group of Jews in population than the Romaniotes. The Romaniotes of Istanbul, as in many communities, including Thessaloniki became assimilated into the Sephardic culture and adopted the Sephardic liturgy as ...

  7. Old Yishuv - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Old_Yishuv

    In 1492 and again in 1498, when the Sephardic Jews were expelled from Spain and Portugal respectively, refugees migrated to the Land of Israel, which changed hands from Mamluks to Ottomans after the second Ottoman–Mamluk war, and Ottoman tolerance was seen as an alternative to Christian persecution.

  8. History of the Jews in Turkey - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_the_Jews_in_Turkey

    Anatolia's Jewish population before Ottoman times primarily consisted of Greek-speaking Romaniote Jews, with a handful of dispersed Karaite communities. In the late fifteenth and early sixteenth centuries, many Sephardic Jews from Spain, Portugal and South Italy expelled by the Alhambra Decree found refuge across the Ottoman Empire , including ...

  9. List of South-East European Jews - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_South-East...

    Solomon Eliezer Alfandari, Sephardic rabbi; Isak Andic, is a Spanish billionaire businessman; Seyla Benhabib, political theorist [17] Can Bonomo, musician from İzmir who represented Turkey at the Eurovision Song Contest 2012 in Baku, Azerbaijan; Abraham Salomon Camondo, Ottoman-Italian financier and philanthropist; patriarch of the Camondo family