465Council of Vannes Prohibits Clergy from Jewish Feasts

Council of Vannes, Gaul prohibited the Christian clergy from...
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465
517
535
538
692
1197

🚫 Council of Vannes Prohibits Clergy from Jewish Feasts

Council of Vannes, Gaul prohibited the Christian clergy from participating in Jewish feasts.
ChristianityCouncil of VannesReligious LawSocial ExclusionClergyGaul
FranceFrance

🍽️ Council of Epaone Bans Christians from Jewish Feasts

Christians are banned from participating in Jewish feasts as a result of the Council of Epaone.
Council of EpaoneReligious LawSocial ExclusionChristianityFeastsReligious Practices
FranceFrance

🏢 Council of Clermont Bans Jews from Public Office

The First Council of Clermont prohibits Jews from holding public office.
Council of ClermontPublic OfficeSocial ExclusionReligious LawChristianity
FranceFrance

📜 Third Council of Orléans: Restrictions on Jewish Employment and Public Appearance

The Third Council of Orléans forbids Jews to employ Christian servants or possess Christian slaves. Jews are prohibited from appearing in the streets during Passion Week: "their appearance is an insult to Christianity". The Merovingian king Childebert approves the measure.
Third Council of Orléans: Restrictions on Jewish Employment and Public Appearance (538)
Early Middle AgesChurch CouncilsMerovingian DynastyReligious LawDiscriminationChristianityLegal RestrictionsJewish-Christian Relations
FranceFrance

🛁 Quinisext Council's Antisemitic Decrees

Quinisext Council in Constantinople forbids Christians on pain of excommunication to bathe in public baths with Jews, employ a Jewish doctor or socialize with Jews.
Quinisext Council's Antisemitic Decrees (692)
Byzantine EmpireQuinisext CouncilAntisemitismReligious LawSocial Exclusion7th CenturyReligious DiscriminationCouncil of TrulloSegregationPersecution
TurkeyTurkey

🚫 Christians Barred From Trading with Jews

In an attempt to isolate the Jewish population economically, Christians were barred from buying food from Jews or having conversations with them under the threat of excommunication.
Economic RestrictionsMiddle AgesPersecutionChristianitySocial ExclusionAnti-Judaism