Gemmingen, von, Uriel, elector and archbishop, addresses Maximilian I, [431].
appointed to examine Hebrew books, [441].
imperial commissioner, [437].
interferes in the Reuchlin trial, [452].
opposes Pfefferkorn, [430], [431].
See [Chapter XIV].
Geneva (lake), scene of a Jewish persecution, [103]–[104], [105].
Genoa, commerce of, [285].
Jews of, banished, [554].
Spanish exiles in, [362]–[363].
German language cultivated by Polish Jews, [421].
Germans in the Middle Ages, [422]–[423].
Germany, cities of, re-admit Jews, [127]–[128].
Germany, Jews of, and the ban against science, [40].
and the confiscation of Hebrew books, [438].
in the seventeenth century, [694]–[702].
intellectual decay among the, [96], [133]–[135], [227].
observe a fast day, [225]–[226].
oppose Pfefferkorn, [427].
persecuted, [96], [97], [98], [218].
poll-tax imposed on, [96]–[97], [166].
privileges confirmed, [219].
protected by emperors, [36], [98].
speak a jargon, [388]–[389].
under Emperor Frederick III, [293]–[294].
See also [cities of Germany].
Germany, North, Jews of, few in number, [111].
Germany, southern, Jews of,
charged with the blood-accusation, [227].
treated with hostility, [258].