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Mass Expulsion
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Mass Expulsion

Rowan Dorin on Jews, usury, and the rise of expulsion in medieval Europe

Originally published on February 20, 2023 (Episode 304)

Introduction

“At the start of the twelfth century,” writes Rowan Dorin, “western European rulers almost never resorted to the collective expulsions of wrongdoers from their domains; ecclesiastical authorities evinced little concern about the Jewish communities living under Christian rule; and the church’s efforts to repress usury focused largely on clerics who engaged in money lending. By the late thirteenth century, expulsion had become a recurring tool of royal governance in both England and France; bishops across Latin Christendom were advocating for harsh restrictions on Jewish life; and Popes, theologians, and canon lawyers had recast usury as menacing the whole of society…”

Why and how this dramatic transformation occurred is the focus of Dorin’s No Return: Jews, Christian Usurers, and the Spread of Mass Expulsion in Medieval Europe (Princeton University Press, 2023). In our conversation, he explains how legal thought, royal policy, and religious anxiety converged to make mass expulsion a normalized practice—and how this history reverberates into the present, when expulsion remains a tool in the arsenal of governments.


About the Guest

Rowan Dorin is Assistant Professor of History at Stanford University. No Return is his first book.


For Further Investigation

Selections and recommendations by Rowan Dorin


💬 Listen & Discuss

How should we think about expulsion as a political tool? Was it primarily religious, legal, or economic in origin? Share your reflections in the comments—and pass this episode along to anyone interested in medieval Europe or the history of intolerance.

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