The Diary of David Reuveniסיפור דוד הראובני
David Reuveni's Hebrew travel diary recounting his journeys and mission — a key (if disputed) source for his life.
Full text not yet available in our corpus.
1490 CE–1538 CE · Acharonim · Venice
A mysterious Jewish emissary who appeared in Europe in the 1520s claiming to represent a Jewish kingdom in Arabia ruled by his brother, and offering a military alliance to help drive the Ottomans from the Land of Israel. Received by Pope Clement VII in Rome (1524) and by King John III of Portugal, his arrival ignited intense messianic hopes among the Jews and conversos of his day — most famously inspiring the converso Diogo Pires to return to Judaism as R. Shlomo Molcho. After traveling with Molcho to petition the Emperor Charles V at Regensburg, Reuveni was arrested and is believed to have been put to death by the Spanish Inquisition at Llerena (Badajoz), Spain, around 1538. His true origins remain unknown to history.
Life journeyclick any stop, or use ←/→Trace on the orchard map →
First appeared in Europe at Venice (c.1523-24), presenting his mission for a Jewish-Christian alliance against the Ottomans.
# Venice In the late fifteenth and early sixteenth centuries, Venice was the jewel of Mediterranean trade—a maritime republic whose merchant galleys connected Europe to the Ottoman Empire and beyond, ruled by an oligarchy of patrician families whose power rested on commerce and naval supremacy. The city rose from its lagoon like a dream of marble and water, its canals lined with warehouses bulging with spices, silks, and precious goods, while the great Basilica of San Marco dominated the skyline as a symbol of Venetian pride and wealth. Jews had been permitted to settle in Venice for centuries, drawn by its role as a crossroads of Christian and Muslim worlds; by the fifteenth century, the community was small but prosperous, composed largely of merchants, physicians, and moneylenders who lived under carefully negotiated restrictions and periodic renewals of their charter. Though forbidden from owning property in most of the city, Venetian Jews occupied a precarious but culturally fertile space, their status as trusted intermediaries in international trade granting them a unique visibility and protection. The Jewish scholars who gathered in Venice during these decades found in the city not only safety but access to the vast networks of information and texts flowing through its ports—a place where Hebrew learning could flourish alongside the hum of commerce, and where a Jewish sage might sit in study while the bells of San Marco rang across the water.
In the same place & time
Sages whose lives overlapped with David HaReuveni’s in the same cities, drawn from their recorded journeys.
The world in their lifetime
Thinkers and teachers of other traditions whose lives overlapped with David HaReuveni’s — a glimpse of the wider world they lived in. Drawn purely from recorded birth and death years.
David Reuveni's Hebrew travel diary recounting his journeys and mission — a key (if disputed) source for his life.
Full text not yet available in our corpus.