History, asked by shivarthdixit3378, 24 days ago

what was the stereotype about the killers of the Christ

Answers

Answered by kaminaboy
1

Explanation:

Jewish deicide was a theological position that had been formalised in early Christianity that the Jewish people were collectively and forever responsible for the death of Jesus,[1][2] a charge that was made as early as Justin Martyr and Melito of Sardis.[3] This accusation, that the Jews were Christ-killers, fed into Christian antisemitism.[4] The slur proliferated and was used to incite mobs into hostility and even all forms of violence against Jews, including pogroms, massacres of Jews during the Crusades, expulsion of the Jewish population from England, France, Spain, Portugal and other places, and tortures of the Spanish and Portuguese Inquisitions and genocide of the Holocaust.

Answered by iTzTaniskh
1

Answer:

This accusation, that the Jews were Christ-killers, fed into Christian antisemitism. The slur proliferated and was used to incite mobs into hostility

Explanation:

This accusation, that the Jews were Christ-killers, fed into Christian antisemitism. The slur proliferated and was used to incite mobs into hostility This accusation, that the Jews were Christ-killers, fed into Christian antisemitism. The slur proliferated and was used to incite mobs into hostility

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