Letter 9036: Having learned what zeal inflames your Fraternity in behalf of Christian slaves whom Jews buy from the territories of Gaul, we apprize you that your solicitude has so pleased us that it is also our own deliberate judgment that they should be inhibited from traffic of this kind. But we find from Basilius, the Hebrew, who has come here with other ...

Pope Gregory the GreatFortunatus|c. 599 AD|gregory great
illnessproperty economicsslavery captivity
Slavery or captivity; Military conflict; Conversion/baptism

Gregory to Fortunatus, Bishop of Naples.

I have learned with what zeal your Fraternity has been working on behalf of Christian slaves purchased by Jews from the territories of Gaul. Your efforts have pleased me greatly, and it is my own firm judgment that this kind of trade should be restricted.

However, Basilius, a Jewish man who has come here with other Jews, tells me that they are being ordered to make these purchases by various government officials, and that both Christians and pagans are among those acquired. The situation needs careful handling -- those who gave the orders should not be openly defied, and people who claim they were acting against their will should not bear unfair costs.

Here is what I want your Fraternity to enforce: when these dealers return from Gaul, any Christian slaves they have brought must either be handed over to the officials who ordered the purchase, or sold to Christian buyers within forty days. After those forty days, no Christian slave may remain in Jewish hands under any circumstances.

If any of these slaves fall ill and cannot be sold within the allotted time, they must be disposed of as directed once they have recovered.

No one should suffer financial loss for a transaction that was blameless in itself. And since it is customary, when new rules are established, to apply them going forward rather than punishing past actions with heavy penalties -- if any slaves remain in their hands from last year's purchases, or have recently been taken from them by you, give them the opportunity to sell them properly while they are with you. This way, they incur no losses for acting in good faith under the old arrangement.

Modern English rendering for readability. See the 19th-century translation or original Latin/Greek for scholarly use.

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