The Judiaria de Tomar occupied the area of today’s Rua Dr. Joaquim Jacinto, the old Rua da Judiaria, later called Rua Nova. It was a central street of the town, close to commercial activity and integrated into the urban core of Tomar rather than set apart on the margins.
First Evidence of the Jewish Community
The oldest evidence usually associated with the Jewish presence of Tomar is the epitaph of Rabbi José de Tomar, dated 1315. By the end of the fourteenth century the community was already institutionally visible. In 1384 there is reference to the serviço geral dos judeus de Tomar, which shows that the Jews of the town already formed a recognized and taxable communal body.
The Comuna of Tomar
The Judiaria de Tomar was the space of an organized comuna, not just a cluster of houses. The Jewish community of the town had enough stability and structure to maintain its own collective life, and by the fifteenth century it was large enough to sustain a defined quarter and a synagogue. Later historiography has estimated a population of around 150 to 200 Jews in mid-fifteenth-century Tomar, rising to about 250 to 300 by the time of the expulsion, with additional growth linked to Jews who arrived from Castile.
Why Jews Settled in Tomar
Tomar was one of the main political, administrative, and economic centers linked to the Order of Christ. That position helps explain the consolidation of a Jewish community there. The organization of the Judiaria is associated in local and historical tradition with the period of Infante D. Henrique, under whose protection Jews were settled in this central street. The quarter was therefore connected to the wider importance of Tomar itself and to the urban opportunities created by a town with strong commercial and institutional life.
Street and Limits
The Judiaria was organized around a single main street. Local historical interpretation places its limits near Rua Direita and Rua dos Moinhos and holds that the quarter had gates at its ends, closed at night. This gives the Judiaria de Tomar a clear urban form: a controlled Jewish street inside the town, but in a central and economically active area.
What Survives
The old street survives today as Rua Dr. Joaquim Jacinto. The former synagogue still stands there and remains the clearest material marker of the Judiaria. Even though the gates no longer survive, the location of the quarter is still easy to understand in the present city through the continuity of the street and the permanence of its main monument.
Travessa da Judiaria is a short lane in the historic center of Santarém whose name preserves the exact footprint of the city’s medieval Jewish quarter. In late medieval documentation, this axis appears as the Rua Nova da Judiaria (“New Street of the Jewish Quarter”), and scholarly urban-history work identifies today’s Travessa da Judiaria and the nearby Rua Maestro Luís da Silveira as the main surviving alignments of the 15th-century Jewish quarter’s internal street structure.
As a street, the Travessa is valuable precisely because it is not an abstract “memory of Jews,” it is a retained piece of the medieval urban grid. Research on Santarém’s urban evolution links this micro-topography to regulatory mechanisms typical of Portuguese towns, in which Jewish residence was concentrated and movement could be controlled through narrow passages, bounded circulation, and the management of access routes. In this reading, the Travessa reflects a lived urban environment of dense housing and constrained space, rather than a symbolic label applied later.
The street’s position also anchors it physically within the fortified city. A pedestrian itinerary for Santarém’s historic center places the descent into Travessa da Judiaria from Avenida 5 de Outubro and notes that, at its end, one can still observe to the left an old bastion of the city wall, before continuing along the side of the Igreja da Graça. This situates the Travessa on the edge between residential lanes and the defensive architecture of the upper town, a typical setting for late medieval quarters shaped by walls, gates, and internal boundaries.
In present-day administrative geography, Travessa da Judiaria lies in the parish of Marvila (Santarém) and is associated with the postal code 2000-123, with publicly listed coordinates for the street.
The Jewish quarter of Santarém was one of the most important medieval Jewish settlements in central Portugal, reflecting the city’s strategic position on the Tagus River and its role as a political, military, and commercial center of the kingdom. From at least the 12th century, Santarém hosted a structured Jewish community integrated into the urban fabric and the royal economy, benefiting from proximity to Lisbon and from intense riverine and agricultural trade.
Documentary sources from the 13th and 14th centuries attest to a legally defined judiaria, protected by royal authority and governed by its own internal institutions. The Jewish quarter was enclosed and regulated, following the common urban model of medieval Portuguese towns, with controlled access points that were closed at night. Within this space were located the essential communal structures: synagogue, rabbinical court, communal oven, ritual bath (mikveh), and houses belonging to Jewish families involved in trade, crafts, medicine, administration, and finance.
The Jewish population of Santarém played a relevant role in royal service. Jewish tax farmers, scribes, physicians, and merchants are recorded in royal documentation, particularly during the reigns of D. Dinis, D. Afonso IV, and D. Pedro I. The community contributed to local and regional economies through agricultural management, wine production, artisanal activity, and commercial circulation along the Tagus corridor.
In the 15th century, as in other Portuguese cities, the Jews of Santarém were affected by increasing social tension, legal restrictions, and episodes of pressure following the waves of anti-Jewish violence in the Iberian Peninsula. Despite this, the community remained active until the end of the century. The decisive rupture came in 1496–1497, with the royal decree ordering the expulsion or forced conversion of the Jews of Portugal under King D. Manuel I. The Jewish quarter was dissolved, its institutions dismantled or repurposed, and its inhabitants either left the kingdom or were forcibly integrated into the Christian population as New Christians.
Although no synagogue building survives today, the memory of the judiaria persists in Santarém’s urban layout, historical toponymy, and archival documentation. The Jewish quarter forms an essential part of the city’s medieval history and stands as testimony to the long-standing Jewish presence in the Ribatejo region and to its abrupt erasure at the turn of the early modern period.