# Lisbon
In the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries, Lisbon stood as the jewel of the Portuguese maritime empire, its harbors crowded with caravels returning from African voyages and Indian spice routes under the House of Aviz. The city perched on a dramatic confluence of river and sea, its steep hills and narrow alleys climbing toward the Moorish castle, while ocean winds carried salt and ambition through streets thick with merchants and translators. The Jewish community of Lisbon was among Europe's most prosperous and learned, numbering several thousand souls despite increasingly restrictive royal policies—rabbinical families possessed both wealth from banking and commerce and an intellectual heritage stretching back through medieval Spanish Jewry. This was a city where Torah learning flourished in an atmosphere of precarious splendor; Jewish philosophers, legal authorities, and biblical commentators gathered in academies while simultaneously facing mounting pressures from a monarchy veering toward forced conversion and Inquisitorial scrutiny. The famous Judariá, or Jewish quarter, pulsed with the energy of a community producing some of the era's most significant halakhic and mystical works, even as Portugal's golden age gradually darkened for its Jews, culminating in expulsion decrees that would scatter this vibrant diaspora to the Ottoman lands and beyond.
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Lisbon through the eras
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Rishonim
Lisbon in the Rishonic era was a city transformed by conquest and reconquest, passing from Muslim Umayyad hands to Christian Portuguese rule in 1147, and becoming the dynastic seat of the Portuguese crown by the fourteenth century. The Jewish community there—among the largest and most prosperous in the Iberian Peninsula—enjoyed relative security under Christian monarchs who valued Jewish physicians, financiers, and scholars; they lived in a distinct judaria near the cathedral, with synagogues, schools, and markets humming with both Iberian and North African Jewish culture. The intellectual life was vivid and cosmopolitan: biblical exegesis, Kabbalah, and legal codification flourished, drawing on the golden heritage of Spanish Jewry even as that world convulsed with expulsions and conversions. The city's harbor—one of Christendom's great ports—made it a meeting place for Sephardic traders and refugees fleeing persecution elsewhere. When the Portuguese monarchy finally expelled the Jews in 1496-97, following Spain's expulsion five years before, that golden age ended abruptly; many of Lisbon's scholars, including the Abarbanel family, scattered to the Ottoman Mediterranean and beyond, carrying their learning and manuscripts into exile.