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| List of Illustrations | p. xi |
| List of Tables | p. xiii |
| Preface | p. xv |
| Introduction | p. 1 |
| 70 CE-1492: How Many Jews Were There, and Where and How Did They Live? | p. 11 |
| From Jesus to Muhammad (I CE-622): A World of Farmers | p. 15 |
| From Muhammad to Hulagu Khan (622-1258): Farmers to Merchants | p. 31 |
| From Hulagu Khan to Tomás de Torquemada (1258-1492): The End of the Gold... MORE | p. 44 |
| Jewish History, 70 CE-1492: Puzzles | p. 51 |
| Were the Jews a Persecuted Minority? | p. 52 |
| Restrictions on Jewish Economic Activities | p. 52 |
| Taxation Discrimination | p. 58 |
| Physical versus Portable Human Capital | p. 59 |
| Self-Segregated Religious Minority | p. 61 |
| The Economics of Small Minorities | p. 62 |
| Summary | p. 65 |
| The People of the Book, 200 BCE-200 CE | p. 66 |
| The Two Pillars of Judaism from Ezra to Hillel (500-50 BCE): The Temple and the Torah | p. 66 |
| The Lever of Judaism: Education as a Religious Norm | p. 69 |
| The Destruction of the Second Temple: From Ritual Sacrifices to Torach Reading and Study | p. 73 |
| The Legacy of Rabbinic Judaism: The Mishna and Universal Primary Education, 10 CE-200 | p. 74 |
| Judaism and Education: The Unique Link in the World of the Mishna | p. 78 |
| The Economics of Hebrew Literacy in a World of Farmers | p. 80 |
| Heterogeneity and the Choices Facing Jewish Farmers circa 200 | p. 82 |
| The Economic Theory: Basic Setup | p. 84 |
| The Economic Theory: Predictions | p. 87 |
| Life in a Village in the Galilee circa 200 through the Lens of the Theory | p. 88 |
| Annex 4.A: Formal Model of Education and Conversion of Farmers | p. 89 |
| Jews in the Talmud Era, 200-650: The Chosen Few | p. 95 |
| An Increasingly Literate Farming Society | p. 96 |
| Conversions of Jewish Farmers | p. 111 |
| Summary | p. 122 |
| From Farmers to Merchants, 750-1150 | p. 124 |
| The Economics of Hebrew Literacy in a World of Merchants | p. 125 |
| The Golden Age of Literate Jews in the Muslim Caliphates | p. 130 |
| Summary | p. 150 |
| Annex 6.A: Formal Model of Education and Conversion of Merchants | p. 150 |
| Educated Wandering Jews, 800-1250 | p. 153 |
| Wandering Jews before Marco Polo | p. 154 |
| Jewish Migration within the Muslim Caliphates | p. 163 |
| Migration of Byzantine Jewry | p. 172 |
| Jewish Migration to and within Christian Europe | p. 173 |
| Migration of the Jewish Religious Center | p. 195 |
| Summary | p. 200 |
| Segregation or Choice? From Merchants to Moneylenders, 1000-1500 | p. 201 |
| The Economics of Money and Credit in Medieval Europe | p. 202 |
| Jewish Prominence in Moneylending: Hypotheses | p. 209 |
| The Dynamics of Jewish Moneylending in Medieval Europe | p. 212 |
| Jewish Moneylending in Medieval Italy: A Detailed Analysis | p. 219 |
| Attitudes toward Moneylending | p. 232 |
| Facts and Competing Hypotheses | p. 237 |
| From Merchants to Moneylenders: Comparative Advantage in Complex Intermediation | p. 241 |
| Annex 8.A: The Charter to the Jews of Vienna | p. 244 |
| The Mongol Shock: Can Judaism Survive When Trade and Urban Economies Collapse? | p. 248 |
| The Mongol Conquest of the Muslim Middle East | p. 249 |
| Socioeconomic Conditions in the Middle East under the Mongols | p. 252 |
| Jewish Demography under Mongol and Mamluk Rule: An Experiment | p. 254 |
| Why Judaism Cannot Survive When Trade and Urban Economies Collapse | p. 258 |
| Summary | p. 259 |
| 1492 to Today: Open Questions | p. 261 |
| Portrait of World Jewry circa 1492 | p. 261 |
| Jewish History, 70 CE-1492: Epilogue | p. 264 |
| Trajectory of the Jewish People over the Past 500 Years | p. 266 |
| Persistence of Jewish Occupational Structure | p. 268 |
| Appendix | p. 274 |
| Bibliography | p. 287 |
| Index | p. 317 |
| Table of Contents provided by Ingram. All Rights Reserved. |