The Imprisonment of Strasbourg’s Jews and the…
February 1349 CE
The Imprisonment of Strasbourg’s Jews and the Preparations for Mass Execution (February 13, 1349)
On Friday, February 13, 1349, instead of preparing for Shabbat, the Jewish community of Strasbourg faced one of the darkest moments in its history. Rather than baking challah, cleaning their homes, and preparing festive meals, they were rounded up, imprisoned, and charged with murder, falsely accused of poisoning wells to spread the Black Death.
Forced Conversions and Imminent Execution
- The new anti-Jewish government, which had taken power on February 10, gave Jewish prisoners a grim ultimatum:
- Convert to Christianity and be spared
- Refuse and face execution
- As the terrified Jewish men, women, and children awaited their fate, the city’s new rulers began constructing a massive wooden platform inside the Jewish cemetery, preparing for mass executions the following day.
The Preparations for the Strasbourg Massacre
- The wooden structure, built in the Jewish cemetery, was designed to burn large numbers of people at once.
- This was not just an execution but a mass extermination, fueled by fear, antisemitic hatred, and economic opportunism, as many local nobles and merchants stood to profit from seizing Jewish property.
- The deliberate and methodical preparations demonstrated that this was not a spontaneous mob attack but a premeditated mass killing sanctioned by the city’s new rulers.
A Pivotal Moment in Medieval Antisemitism
- The Strasbourg Massacre of February 14, 1349, would become one of the largest single pogroms of the Black Death era, part of a broader wave of anti-Jewish violence across Europe.
- The forced conversion demand mirrored similar ultimatums issued in other cities, where Jews were given a choice between abandoning their faith or facing death.
- The execution site in the Jewish cemetery reinforced the total erasure of Jewish life in Strasbourg, as entire families were burned alive in a place that had once been sacred to them.
The events of February 13, 1349, were a prelude to one of the worst atrocities of the medieval period, marking the final hours before the systematic mass murder of Strasbourg’s Jewish community.