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David Alroy (fl. 1160) was a Jewish pseudo-Messiah born in Amedi, Iraq. David Alroy studied Torah and Talmud under Hisdai the Exilarch, and Ali, the head of the Academy in Baghdad. He was also well-versed in Muslim literature and known as a worker of magic.

Historical background[]

The califate in the days of Alroy was in a chaotic state. The Crusades had caused a general condition of unrest and a weakening of the authority of the sultans of Asia Minor and Persia. Defiant chieftains set up small independent states and a heavy poll taxes were levied on all males above the age of fifteen [1]

Messianic pretensions[]

David Alroy led an uprising against Seljuk Sultan Muktafi and called upon the oppressed Jewish community to follow him to Jerusalem, where he would be their king and set them free. Alroy recruited supporters in the mountains of Chaftan, and sent letters to Mosul, Baghdad, and other towns, proclaiming his divine mission. He was born Menahem ben Solomon, but adopted the name "David Alroy" ("Alroy" possibly meaning "the inspired one") when he began claiming to be the Messiah. [2]


His intimate knowledge of the magic arts is said to have convinced many Jews of the truth of his pretensions, and Alroy soon found himself with a considerable following. He resolved to attack the citadel of his native town, Amadia, and directed his supporters to assemble in that city, with swords and other weapons concealed under their robes, and to give, as a pretext for their presence, their desire to study the Talmud.

What followed is uncertain, for the sources of the life of Alroy tell each a different tale, and the subsequent events are interwoven with legend. It is presumed that Alroy and his deluded followers were defeated, and Alroy was put to death.

Benjamin of Tudela's account[]

Benjamin of Tudela relates [3] that the news of Alroy's revolt reached the ears of the Sultan, who sent for the would-be Messiah. "Art thou the King of the Jews?" asked the Moslem sovereign, to which Alroy replied, "I am." The Sultan thereupon cast the Jewish pretender into prison in Tabaristan. Three days later, while the Sultan and his council were engaged in considering Alroy's rebellion, the pseudo-Messiah suddenly appeared in their midst, having miraculously made his escape from prison. The Sultan at once ordered Alroy's rearrest; but, by his magic, the rebel made himself invisible and left the palace. Guided by the voice of Alroy the Sultan and his nobles followed him to the banks of a river, where, having made himself visible, the marvelous wizard was seen to cross the water on a shawl, and make his escape with ease. On the same day he returned to Amadia, a journey which ordinarily took ten days, and, appearing to his followers, related to them his wondrous exploits.

The Sultan now threatened to put the Jews of his dominion to the sword if Alroy did not surrender, and the Jewish authorities in Baghdad pressed Alroy to abandon his messianic visions. From Mosul also an appeal was made to him by Zakkai and Joseph Barihan AlfalaḦ, the leaders of the Jewish community; but all in vain. The governor of Amadia, Saif al-Din, bribed his father-in-law to assassinate him, and the revolt was brought to an end. The Jews of Persia had considerable difficulty in appeasing the wrath of the Sultan, and were obliged to pay a large indemnity.

Alroy's death did not entirely destroy the belief in his heaven-sent mission for the redemption of his people. Two impostors came to Bagdad and succeeded in perpetrating a huge fraud upon the credulous followers of the pseudo-Messiah. They announced that upon a certain night they were all commanded to commence a flight through the air from Bagdad to Jerusalem, and, in the meantime, the followers of Alroy were to give their property into the charge of these two messengers from their dead leader. The dénouement of this cunning scheme may be imagined; and yet, for many years afterward, a sect of Menahemites, as they were termed, continued to revere the memory of the so-called Messiah of Amadia.

Historical sources[]

The principal source of the life of Alroy is Benjamin of Tudela's Travels, (ed. A. Asher, pp. 122-127). This version is followed in its main outlines by Solomon ibn Verga, in his Shebeṭ Yehudah (ed. Wiener, Hebrew text, p. 50). Ibn Verga states, on the authority of Maimonides, that when asked for a proof that he was truly the Messiah, Alroy (or David El-David, as Ibn Verga and David Gans in his ẒemaḦ David call him) replied, "Cut off my head and I shall yet live." David Gans, Gedaliah ibn Yahya (in his Shalshelet ha-Ḳabbalah), who calls him David Almusar, and R. Joseph ben Isaac Sambari (see A. Neubauer, Mediæval Jew. Chron. i. 123) closely follow Benjamin of Tudela's version. The name Menahem ibn Alruhi ("the inspired one"), and the concluding episode of the impostors of Baghdad, are derived from the contemporaneous chronicle of the apostate, Samuel ibn Abbas (see Wiener's Emek ha-Baka, pp. 168). The name Menahem (i.e., the comforter) was a common Messianic appellation. The name Alroy is probably identical with Alruhi (see Wiener, l.c.; Grätz, Gesch. d. Juden, pp. 269 et seq., 426; Basnage, Hist. des Juifs, vii. 9).

Disraeli novel[]

British prime minister Benjamin Disraeli wrote the 1833 novel Alroy based on David Alroy and his revolt. The title of the novel is The Wondrous Tale of Alroy.

References[]

  1. Lebrecht, The State of the Califate of Bagdad in Asher's edition of Benjamin of Tudela, p. 318
  2. Marcus, Jacob Rader (1999). "The Jew in the medieval world: a source book, 315-1791, revised ed.". Hebrew Union College Press. http://books.google.fr/books?id=PCalmtflYtEC&pg=PA278. Retrieved 2009-09-13. 
  3. Lenwitz, Harris (1998). "The Jewish Messiahs: From the Galilee to Crown Heights". Oxford University Press. http://books.google.fr/books?id=PLyb3zV8OmgC&pg=PA81. Retrieved 2009-09-13. 

ru:Алрой, Давид

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