Home / National Book Prize / Mediterranean Jews, Crypto-Jews and the Inquisition in Early Modern Malta Historiographic research Mediterranean Jews, Crypto-Jews and the Inquisition in Early Modern Malta Early modern Malta served as a place of transition for those passing between western Christendom, Islamic North Africa and the Near East. But it was above all a Catholic frontier society – a status that the crusading Knights of Malta were eager to maintain. The presence of a Roman Inquisition tribunal ensured that Catholic residents of Malta and Gozo remained faithful to the teachings of the Catholic Church; a modicum that was applied to every baptised individual. The Inquisition was concerned with the Jews particularly because Judaism was perceived as a distorted reflection of the one true Christian religion. As a result, Jews were looked askance upon not so much for what they believed in, but for their rejection of Christ and their denial of Catholic doctrine. These were the defining characteristics of Judaism. The Jews that passed through Malta between the sixteenth and eighteenth century were few in number. They were in the main forcibly brought to Malta and reduced to slavery. Some managed to be ransomed. Of those that were not ransomed, some chose to convert to Christianity in the hope that life would be more tolerable for them. However, it was exceedingly difficult for neophytes to conceal their true convictions, and this often led to their denouncement in front of the Inquisition tribunal. Buy the book Malta University Press Historiographic research 2025 Carmel Cassar Carmel Cassar is Professor of Cultural History, Director of the Institute of Maltese Studies and Chairman of the Platform for Mediterranean Foodways at the University of Malta. After graduating in History and Italian, Cassar spent a few years reconstituting large sections of the Cathedral and was later responsible for the development of an Ethnography Section, particularly the rehabilitation of the Inquisitor’s Palace (Birgu). He is a Fellow of the Royal Historical Society and Cambridge Commonwealth Society; member of the Renaissance Society of America, and life member of the Malta Historical Society. His books include: A Concise History of Malta; Society, Culture and Identity in Early Modern Malta; Daughters of Eve. Women, Gender Roles, and the Impact of the Council of Trent in Catholic Malta; Honour and Shame in the Mediterranean; Witchcraft, Sorcery and the Inquisition; Fenkata. An Emblem of Maltese Peasant Resistance?; Health, Society and the Plague; and Cibo Mediterraneo. NEED ANY HELP? GET IN TOUCH contact us