{"id":9118,"date":"2023-10-20T12:15:10","date_gmt":"2023-10-20T11:15:10","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.learnancientrome.com\/?p=9118"},"modified":"2023-10-20T12:15:10","modified_gmt":"2023-10-20T11:15:10","slug":"when-did-jews-in-ancient-rome-start","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.learnancientrome.com\/when-did-jews-in-ancient-rome-start\/","title":{"rendered":"When Did Jews In Ancient Rome Start"},"content":{"rendered":"
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Jewish presence in ancient Rome is believed to date from the 2nd or 1st century BC. Jews living in Rome were citizens by the end of that century, and it’s thought that by then there was a Jewish community in the city. This would have been one of the oldest Jewish communities in the world and was likely one of the first stable, diaspora communities. It’s also important to note that Jews were influential in the wider society of Rome, a position they maintained up until the late Roman period.<\/p>\n

It’s thought that the first Jewish settlers in Rome originally came from Jewish communities in the wider Roman provinces of Judea and Syria. One likely source of the original settlers was the group of Jews that were exiled by the Babylonians around 70 BCE. This group was led by the scholar Eleazar of Modein and is often associated with the development of the synagogue in Rome.<\/p>\n

By the 1st century BC, Jews were beginning to play an increasingly important role in wider Roman society. The richly decorated Synagogue of the Libertines, in what is now the Jewish Ghetto, dates from this period and is thought to have been built by the sect of Jews known as the Libertines. Jews were also significant in finance. The bankers Aulus Vitellius and Marcus Aemilius, both primary financiers of the Roman Republic, are known to have been willing to lend money to Jews.<\/p>\n

Jews living in Rome at the time had some limited freedom. For example, they could run shops and businesses, own slaves, and hold funerals in public. This was in contrast to some other places within the empire, where Jews were not allowed to engage in certain public activities. This was particularly true in the more Orthodox parts of some Eastern provinces, where restrictions on public worship could be very tight.<\/p>\n