《在海岛上:英国犹太人宗教史中的地理》

B. Elton
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引用次数: 1

摘要

英国的犹太社区经历了一段独特的宗教历史。这只能用几个因素来解释,但其中之一是英国不同寻常的地理环境。它是一个狭长的岛屿,距离西北欧海岸只有几英里。长期以来,它与欧洲大陆有着密切的联系,但却从未成为欧洲大陆的一部分。就盎格鲁-犹太人而言,这导致了双重劣势。它既不是活跃的主流知识分子的一部分,也不是如此超然,以至于被迫依赖自己的资源。相反,它处于半依赖状态,这抑制了令人兴奋的当地宗教发展。这似乎在中世纪时期都是如此,从10世纪60年代犹太人定居到1290年被驱逐,再到17世纪开放的犹太社区回归。伦敦位于英国东南部的地理位置,在首都和各省之间形成了一种特殊的关系。地区社区可以建立自己的宗教身份,在中央当局试图维护控制时导致摩擦。伦敦犹太人的领袖们也参与了海外社区的活动。英国是一个海洋强国,并发展成为一个海洋帝国。英国风格的社区,带着它所有的特质,遍布世界各地。本文分析了地理对英国犹太人宗教生活的影响,并将其置于理论背景中,利用学术研究其岛屿地位在塑造英国历史中的作用。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
In the Islands of the Sea: Geography in the Religious History of the Jews of Britain
Britain’s Jewish community has experienced a unique religious history. This can only be explained by several factors, but one of those is Britain’s unusual geographical circumstances. It is a long, narrow island just a few miles off the coast of North Western Europe. It has long enjoyed intimate connections to the European mainland without ever being quite part of it. In the case of Anglo-Jewry this has led to a double disadvantage. It was neither part of the vigorous intellectual mainstream nor was it so detached that it was forced to rely on its own resources. Instead it was left semi-dependent, which inhibited exciting local religious developments. This seems to have been the case in both the medieval period, between Jewish settlement in the 1060s and expulsion in 1290, and again since the return of an open Jewish community in the seventeenth century. The location of London in the South East of Britain fostered a particular relationship between the capital and the provinces. Regional communities could establish their own religious identities, leading to friction as central authorities attempted to assert control. The leaders of London Jewry were also involved with overseas communities. Britain was a maritime power and developed a maritime empire. Communities in the British style, with all its idiosyncrasies, were planted around the world. This article analyses these impacts of geography on British Jewish religious life, and places them in a theoretical context using scholarship on the role of its island status in moulding British history.
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