The Tortosa Disputation, 1413–14

In terms of scale and splendour, the greatest of the disputations was that of Tortosa. Instead of lasting for a few days, this one lasted for a period of twenty-one months, with a total of sixty-nine sessions. Instead of being commemorated, on the Christian side, by a brief communique, it was the su...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inJudaism on Trial p. 82
Format Book Chapter
LanguageEnglish
Published The Littman Library of Jewish Civilization 01.10.1984
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ISBN0197100465
9780197100462
DOI10.3828/liverpool/9780197100462.003.0006

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Summary:In terms of scale and splendour, the greatest of the disputations was that of Tortosa. Instead of lasting for a few days, this one lasted for a period of twenty-one months, with a total of sixty-nine sessions. Instead of being commemorated, on the Christian side, by a brief communique, it was the subject of voluminous ‘protocols’, or minutes, kept session by session by the papal notary, and comprising over 600 pages in the edition of Pacios Lopez (1957). On the Jewish side, however, it gave rise to a much shorter account, by Bonastruc Desmaltres, one of the participants, covering only
ISBN:0197100465
9780197100462
DOI:10.3828/liverpool/9780197100462.003.0006