Over the milenia very few Jews converted to Chrstianity. Many were killed because they wouldn't convert.

You will find times, such as 1492 when the Spanish expelled the Jews from Spain, when Jews would convert to be left alive or alone -- but many still secretly kept Shabbat and such.

Already in the 4th and 5th centuries synagogues were burned by Chrstians. Number of Jews slain unknown.

In the middle of the fourth century the first synagogue was destroyed on command of bishop Innocentius of Dertona in Northern Italy. The first synagogue known to have been burned down was near the river Euphrat, on command of the bishop of Kallinikon in the year 388.

694 Council of Toledo: Jews were enslaved, their property confiscated, and their children forcibly baptized.

1010 The Bishop of Limoges (France) had the cities' Jews, who would not convert to Chrstianity, expelled or killed.

1096 First Crusade: Thousands of Jews slaughtered, maybe 12.000 total. Places: Worms 5/18/1096, Mainz 5/27/1096 (1100 persons), Cologne, Neuss, Altenahr, Wevelinghoven, Xanten, Moers, Dortmund, Kerpen, Trier, Metz, Regensburg, Prag and others (All locations Germany except Metz/France, Prag/Czech)

1147 Second Crusade: Several hundred Jews were slain in Ham, Sully, Carentan, and Rameru (all locations in France).

1189/90 Third Crusade: English Jewish communities sacked.

1235, Fulda/Germany: 34 Jewish men and women slain.

1257, 1267: Jewish communities of London, Canterbury, Northampton, Lincoln, Cambridge, and others exterminated.

1290 Bohemia (Poland) allegedly 10,000 Jews killed.

1337 Starting in Deggendorf/Germany a Jew-killing craze reaches 51 towns in Bavaria, Austria, Poland.

1348 All Jews of Basel/Switzerland and Strasbourg/France (two thousand) burned.

1349 In more than 350 towns in Germany all Jews murdered, mostly burned alive (in this one year more Jews were killed than Chrstians in 200 years of ancient Roman persecution of Chrstians).

1389 In Prag 3,000 Jews were slaughtered.

1391 Seville's Jews killed (Archbishop Martinez leading). 4,000 were slain, 25,000 sold as slaves. [DA454] Their identification was made easy by the brightly colored "badges of shame" that all Jews above the age of ten had been forced to wear.

1492 In the year Columbus set sail to conquer a New World, more than 150,000 Jews were expelled from Spain, many died on their way: 6/30/1492.

1648 Chmielnitzki massacres: In Poland about 200,000 Jews were slain.

1650 Jews of Tunisia confined to special quarters (Hra).

1655-56 Massacres of Jews during the wars of Poland against Sweden and Russia.

1670 Expulsion from Vienna: Blood libel at Metz (France).

1711 Johann Andreas Eisenmenger r"tes his Entdecktes Judenthum ("Judaism Unmasked"), a work denouncing Judaism and whlch had a formative influence on modern anti-Semitic polemics.

1712 Blood libel in Sandomierz (Poland) after which the Jews of the'town were expelled.

1715 Pope Pius VI issues a severe "Edict concerning the Jews," in which he renews all former restrictions against them.

1734-36 Haidamacks, paramilitary bands in Polish Ukraine, attack Jews.

1745 Expulsion from Prague.

1768 Haidamacks massacre the Jews of Uman (Poland) together with the Jews from other places who had sought refuge there.

1788 Haidamacks massacre the Jews of Uman (Poland): 20,000 Jews and Poles killed.

1790-92 Destruction of most of the Jewish communities of Morocco.

1791 Pale of Settlements-twenty-five provinces of Czarist Russia established, where Jews permitted permanent residence: Jews forbidden to settle elsewhere in Russia.

1805 Massacre of Jews in Algeria.

1819 A series of anti-Jewish riots in Germany that spread to several neighboring countries (Denmark, Poland, Latvia and Bohemia)
known as Hep! Hep! Riots, from the derogatory rallying cry against the Jews in Germany.

1827 Compulsory military service for the Jews of Russia: Jewish minors under 18 years of age, known as "Cantonists," placed in preparatory military training establishments.

1835 Oppressive constitution for the Jews in Russia issued by Czar Nicholas 1.

1840 Blood libel in Damascus (The Damascus Affair).

1853 Blood libel in Saratov (Russia), bringing a renewal of the blood libel throughout Russia.

1858 Abduction of a 7-year-old Jewish child, Edgard Mortara, in Bologna by Catholic conversionists (Mortara Case), an episode which aroused univeral indignation in liberal circles.

1878 Adolf Stoecker, German anti-Semitic preacher and politician, founds the Social Workers' Party, which marks the beginning of the political anti-Semitic movement in Germany.

1879 Heinrich von Treitschke, German historian and politician, justifies the anti-Semitic campaigns in Germany, bringing anti-Semitism into learned circles.

1879 Wilhelm Marr, German agitator, coins the term anti-Semitism.

1881-84 Pogroms sweep southern Russia, beginning of mass Jewish emigration.

1882 Blood libel in Tiszaeszlar, Hungary, which aroused public opinion throughout Europe.

1882 First International Anti-Jewish Congress convened at Dreseden, Germany.

1882 A series of "temporary laws" confirmed by Czar Alexander III of Russia in May, 1882 ("May Laws"), which adopted a systematic policy of discrimination, with the object of removing the Jews from their economic and public positions.

1885 Expulsion of about 10,000 Russian Jews, refugees of 1881-1884 pogroms, from Germany.

1891 Blood libel in Xanten, Germany.

1891 Expulsion from Moscow, Russia.

1893 Karl Lueger establishes in Vienna the anti-Semitic Christian Social Party and becomes mayor in 1897.

1894 Alfred Dreyfus trial in Paris.

1895 Alexander C. Cuza organizes the Alliance Anti-smitique Universelle in Bucharest, Rumania.

1899 Houston Stewart Chamberlain, racist and anti-Semitic author, publishes his Die Grundlagen des 19 Jahrhunderts which became a basis of National-Socialist ideology.

1899 Blood libel in Bohemia (the Hilsner case).

1903 Pogrom at Kishinev, Russia.

1905 Pogroms n the Ukraine and Bessarabia, perpetuated in 64 towns (most serious in Odessa with over 300 dead and thousands wounded).

1905 First Russian public edition of the Protocols of the Elders of Zion appears (written to cause more anti-semitism and hatred of the Jews)

1906 Pogroms In Bialystok and Siedlce, Russia.

1909-10 Polish boycott against Jews.

1911-13 Menahem Mendel Beilis, blood libel trial at Kiev.

1912 Pogroms in Fez (Morocco).

1915 Ku Klux Klan, rascist organization in the U.S., refounded.

1917-21 Pogroms in the Ukraine and Poland. 1) Pogroms by retreating Red Army from the Ukraine (spring, 1918 ) , before the German army.

2) Pogroms by the retreating Ukraine army under the command of Simon Petlyura, resulting in the deaths of over 8,000Jews.

3)Pogroms by the counter revolutionary "White Army" under the command of General A.I. Denikin (fall, 1919) in which about 1,500 Jews were killed.

4) Pogroms by the "White Army" in Siberia and Mongolia (1919). 5) Pogroms by anti-Soviet bands in the Ukraine (1920-21), in which thousands of Jews were killed.

1919 Abolishment of community organization and non-Communist Jewish institutions in Soviet Russia.

1919 Pogroms in Hungary: c. 3,000 Jews killed.

1920 Adolf Hitler becomes Fuehrer, of the National-Sozialistische Deutsche Arbeiterpartei (NSDAP), later known as National Socialist.

1920 Henry Ford I begins a series of anti-Semitic articles based on the Protocols of the Elders of Zion, in his Dearbon Independent.

1924 Economic restrictions on Jews in Poland.

1925-27 Adolf Hitier's Mein Kampf appears.

1933 Adolf Hitler appointed chancellor of Germany. Anti-Jewish economic boycott: first concentration camps (Dachau, Oranienburg, Esterwegen and Sachsenburg).

1935 Nuremberg Laws introduced.

1937 Anti-Semitic legislation in Rumania.

1937 Discrimination against Jews in Polish universities.

1938 After Anschluss, pogroms in Vienna, anti-Jewish legislation introduced: deportations to camps in Austria and Germany.

1938 Charles E. Coughlin, Roman Catholic priest, starts anti-Semitic weekly radio broadcasts in U.S.

1938 Kristallnacht, Nazi anti-Jewish outrage in Germany and Austria (Nov. 9-10, 1938 ) : Jewish businesses attacked, synagogues burnt, Jews sent to concentration camps.

1938 Racial legislation introduced in Italy (Nov. 17, 1938 ) . Anti Jewish economic legislation in Hungary.

1939 Anti-Jewish laws introduced in the Protectorate (Czechoslovakia).

1939 Outbreak of World War 11 (Sept. 1, 1939), Poland overrun by German army: pogroms in Poland; beginning of the Holocaust.

1940 Nazi Germtny introduces gassing.

1940 Formation of ghettos in Poland: mass shootings of Jews: Auschwitz camp, later an extermination camp, established; Western European Jews under Nazis. Belzec extermination camp established.

1940 Algerian administration applies social laws of Vichy.

1941 Germany invades Russia and the Baltic states. Majdanek extermination camp established. Chelmno and Treblinka extermination camps established. Anti-Jewish laws in Slovakia. Pogroms in Jassy, Rumania. Pogroms and massacres by the Einsatzgruppen and native population in Baltic states and the part of Russia occupied by Germany. Expulsions of Jews from the German Reich to Poland. Beginning of deportation and murder of Jews in France.

1941 Severe riots against Jews in Iraq in consequence of Rashid Ali al-Jilani's coup d'tat. Nazi Germany introduces gassing in extermination camps.

1942 Conference in Wannsee, Berlin, to carry out the "Final Solution" (Jan. 20, 1942). Beginning of mass transports of Jews of Belgium and Holland to Auschwitz. Massacres 'In occupied Russia continue. Death camps of Auschwitz, Majdanek and Treblinka begin to function at full capacity: transports from ghettos to death camps. Sobibor extermination camp established.

1943 Germany declared Judenrein. Transports of Jews from all over Europe to death camps. Final liquidation of the Warsaw ghetto (May 16, 1943). Annihilation of most of the ghettos. Transport of Italian Jews to death camps.

1944 Extermination of Hungarian Jewry.

1945 Germany surrenders (May 8, 1945) estimated Jewish victims in the Holocaust 5,820,960.

1946 Pogroms at Kielce, Poland, 42 Jews murdered and many wounded (July 4, 1946).

1948 Jewish culture in U.S.S.R. suppressed and Jewish intellectuals shot.

1948 Pogroms in Libya.

1952 Prague Trials (Slnsk): Murder of Yiddish intellectuals in Russia and many Jews disappear or sent to work camps.

1953 Accusation of "Doctors' plot" in the U.S.S.R., cancelled with Stalin's death.


www.chrstianaggression.org/item_display.php?type=ARTICLES&id=1137511050

www.geocities.com/Athens/Cyprus/8815/chrono.html


סופי

And everything that Sarah tells you, listen to her voice. Bereshit (Genesis) 21:12