The '''Expulsion of the Jews from Navarre''' was decreed in 1498 by John III of Navarre and Catherine of Navarre under pressure from Ferdinand II of Aragon.<ref>{{Cite journal|url=https://revistaseug.ugr.es/index.php/meahhebreo/article/view/13354/11602|title=Una provisión de Felipe II en favor de los conversos de Navarra|first=Antonio|last=Domínguez Ortiz|volume=9|year=1960|doi=10.30827/meahhebreo.v9i0.822|journal=Miscelánea de Estudios Árabes y Hebraicos. Sección Hebreo|publisher=Editorial Universidad de Granada|location=Granada}}</ref>
Exiled Jews from Castile and Aragon sought refuge in Navarre after 1492 in places such as Tudela,<ref>{{Cite book|title=n Mito y Realidad en la Historia de Navarra. Actas del IV Congreso de Historia de Navarra|location=Pamplona|year=1998|chapter-url=http://sehn.org.es/wp-content/uploads/2017/10/4309.pdf|chapter=Los cristianos nuevos de Navarra. Algunas consideraciones|first=Esteban|last=Orta Rubio|page=108}}</ref> thereby forking the Navarrese jewry into ''judíos nativos'' ('native Jews') and judíos ''nuevamente venidos'' ('newly arrived Jews').<ref>{{Cite journal|title=The Last Jews on Iberian Soil: Navarrese Jewry, 1479-1498|first=Benjamin R.|last=Gampel|journal=Proceedings of the American Academy for Jewish Research|volume=53|year=1986|doi=10.2307/3622608|pages=59; 62|jstor=3622608}}</ref> The order of expulsion set a March 1498 deadline, offering Jews the choice of leaving or converting to Christianity.{{Sfn|Gampel|1986|p=65}} Having no easy way out of landlocked Navarre, most Jews converted and remained in the kingdom.{{Sfn|Gampel|1986|p=66}} New Christians and their descendants thrived in 16th- and 17th-century Navarre.{{Sfn|Orta Rubio|1998|p=108}}
== References == {{reflist}}
Category:History of Navarre Category:Expulsions of Jews Category:Ethnic cleansing in Europe
{{Navarre-stub}} {{Antisemitism-stub}}