A new set of regulations is issued…
April 1616 CE
A new set of regulations is issued in 1616 as a reaction to the Fettmilch Rebellion.
However, these laws, originating with the Imperial Commissioners from Hessen and the Mainz palatinate (Kurmainz), are based largely on anti-Semitic attitudes and did little to support the rights of the Jewish community.
The regulations determine that no more than five hundred Jewish families live in Frankfurt.
The Jewish population in the sixty years before the Pogrom had increased tenfold from forty-three to four hundred and fifty-three.
The law now puts an upper limit on the growth that is possible in the Jewish community.
Jewish marriages are limited to twelve per year, while Christians have only to prove that their wealth allows a marriage.
The Jews are broadly granted the same rights in business that Christian non-citizen residents have.
These non-citizen rights, which had evolved during the Middle Ages, exclude them from most types of business.
All non-citizens are prevented from opening shops, operating retail business in the city, entering into business ventures with full citizens, or owning business property.
One significant difference is that Jews are explicitly allowed to engage in wholesale businesses, trading commodities such as grain, wine, cloth, silk, and other textiles.
The Emperor may have allowed the Jews the wholesale business to weaken the powerful Christian traders, which have usurped the power the guilds had lost in the Fettmilch Rebellion.
A positive result of the new laws is that the regulations are not to be renewed every three years and therefore constitute a permanent grant of residency.
The Jews, however, continue to be treated as an alien group, who have a lower status than citizens and non-citizen residents alike.
They remain subjects of the Town Council and, unlike Christians, cannot apply for citizenship.
The Law of 1616 explicitly forbids the Jews from even calling themselves Citizen.
Finally, Jews pay more than other residents in extra tariffs and additional taxes.