Acharonim
In the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, Amsterdam emerged as a sanctuary for Jews fleeing persecution across Europe, transforming into one of the continent's most vibrant Jewish centers under Dutch Protestant rule. The Portuguese Jewish community, composed largely of Marranos who had escaped Iberia, established themselves in the city's expanding neighborhoods and soon created an intellectual and mercantile powerhouse, their wealth from trade funding elegant synagogues and supporting both Talmudic scholarship and mystical pursuits. The Ashkenazi Jews who arrived later, especially after the Chmielnicki massacres devastated Polish Jewry in 1648, found refuge here too, establishing their own institutions and eventually outnumbering their Sephardic counterparts. Amsterdam's yeshivas became renowned across Europe for rigorous study of halakha and Kabbalah alike—tensions between rationalist and mystical approaches played out in lecture halls and study circles. The city's famous Portuguese Synagogue, completed in 1675 with its magnificent wooden ceiling and abundant natural light, stood as a symbol of the community's freedom and flourishing, while the bustling Jodenbreestraat (Jews' Broad Street) pulsed with Hebrew printing presses, manuscript traders, and scholars debating the nature of divine emanation and ethical practice.