Portuguese crypto-Jews: the genetic heritage of a complex history
Inês Nogueiro 1 , João C Teixeira 2 , António Amorim 1 , Leonor Gusmão 3 , Luis Alvarez 1
Affiliations
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/25699075
- PMID: 25699075
- PMCID: PMC4313780
- DOI: 10.3389/fgene.2015.00012
Abstract
The first documents mentioning Jewish people in Iberia are from the Visigothic period. It was also in this period that the first documented anti-Judaic persecution took place. Other episodes of persecution would happen again and again during the long troubled history of the Jewish people in Iberia and culminated with the Decrees of Expulsion and the establishment of the Inquisition: some Jews converted to Catholicism while others resisted and were forcedly baptized, becoming the first Iberian Crypto-Jews. In the 18th century the official discrimination and persecution carried out by the Inquisition ended and several Jewish communities emerged in Portugal. From a populational genetics point of view, the worldwide Diaspora of contemporary Jewish communities has been intensely studied. Nevertheless, very little information is available concerning Sephardic and Iberian Crypto-Jewish descendants. Data from the Iberian Peninsula, the original geographic source of Sephardic Jews, is limited to two populations in Portugal, Belmonte, and Bragança district, and the Chueta community from Mallorca. Belmonte was the first Jewish community studied for uniparental markers. The construction of a reference model for the history of the Portuguese Jewish communities, in which the genetic and classical historical data interplay dynamically, is still ongoing. Recently an enlarged sample covering a wide region in the Northeast Portugal was undertaken, allowing the genetic profiling of male and female lineages. A Jewish specific shared female lineage (HV0b) was detected between the community of Belmonte and Bragança. In contrast to what was previously described as a hallmark of the Portuguese Jews, an unexpectedly high polymorphism of lineages was found in Bragança, showing a surprising resistance to the erosion of genetic diversity typical of small-sized isolate populations, as well as signs of admixture with the Portuguese host population.
One reply on “I Thought Crypto-Jews Was a Conspiracy, But It Is Covered by PubMed”
In NM, there’s remnants of Spanish
expeditionary bloodlines. I was just
reading a bit of Nehemiah. The name
“Perez” is mentioned in the listing of
those that returned from captivity.
Up north around Taos are green eyed
Spaniard folk who say they are ”puro “,
meaning never interbred with indians.
The name “Rael” is well distributed,
usually connected to Jewish blood,
though many have no idea.