The 'Roman (Jewish) Ghetto' was located in the
rione Sant'Angelo, in the area surrounded by today's ''Via del
Portico d'Ottavia'', ''Lungotevere dei Cenci'', ''Via del Progresso'' and ''Via di Santa Maria del Pianto'' close to the
Tiber and the
Theater of Marcellus, in
Rome,
Italy.
Papal bull ''
Cum nimis absurdum'', promulgated by
Pope Paul IV in
1555 segregated the
Jews, who had lived freely in Rome since Antiquity, in a walled quarter with three gates that were locked at night, and subjected them to various restrictions on their personal freedoms such as limits to allowed professions and compulsory Catholic sermons on the Jewish ''
shabbat'' although to a lesser degree than in other
European countries.
This "ghetto" had two objectives— to protect Christians from too close an association with persons of a different religion, and to protect the Jews from mobs or hooligans. The ghetto was welcome to some Jews because it protected the small community from the drain which must follow from assimilation to the majority and enabled special religious customs to be observed without interference. For three or four decades of the nineteenth century this was not a black mark to the
papal government—Vienna, Prague, Venice—and further East, in Russia and Poland, their treatment could be rougher."
[{{fullurl:#endnote_HISTPOPE]
İn
1798, during the Roman Republic, the Ghetto was legally abolished, and the tree of Freedom was planted in Piazza delle Scole, but it was reinstated as soon as the Papacy regained control. In
1848, during
the brief revolution, the Ghetto was abolished once more, again temporarily. The Jews had to petition annually for permission to live there, and were disabled from owning any property even in the Ghetto. They paid a yearly tax for the privilege; formality and tax survived until
1850.

Detail from the Arch of Titus showing spoils from the Sack of Jerusalem
They had to swear yearly loyalty to the Pope by the
Arch of Titus (it celebrates the Roman
sack of Jerusalem).
The requirement that Jews live within the Ghetto was abolished when the last remnant of the
Papal States was overthrown on September 20, 1870.
The city of Rome was able to tear down the Ghetto's walls in
1888 and demolish it almost completely, before the area was reconstructed around the new
Synagogue.
The ghetto of Rome was the last remaining
ghetto in Western Europe until its later reintroduction by
Nazi Germany.
Now it is "one of the Rome's most charming and eclectic neighborhoods, [...] restaurants serving up some of the best food in the city"
[{{fullurl:#endnote_LETSGO], like the Jewish specialty of fried
artichokes ("Carciofi alla giudìa").

Disappeared Ghetto: ''Arco delle Azimelle'' in a watercolour by
Ettore Roesler Franz (1880 ca.). The ''Azimelle'' are jewish unleavened breads, which were produced in a bakery in this lane.
References
#
A History of the Popes 1830-1914, , Owen, Chadwick, Oxford University Press, 1998, ISBN 0-19-826922-6
# ''Rome: A
Let's Go City Guide'', Matthew W. Mahan (editor), Macmillan,
Cambridge, MA, 2004. ISBN 1-4050-3329-0, page 104.
External links
★
Google Map: The Ghetto lies north of the Isola Tiberina, the white dome of the temple lies between Via Caterina and the river flanking, Lungotevere de Cenci.
★
October 18: Jews of Rome Deported to Auschwitz
★
Liliana Picciotto Fargion. Il Libro della Memoria. Gli Ebrei deportati dall'Italia (1943-1945). Milan: Mursia, 1991
★
Entry in Romeartlover site