Archival resources in Cervera is the subject of an extensive report by Maria Jose Surribas-Camps in Barcelona. My very good friend Maria Jose has done research in Catalan and other archives for many Sephardic researchers, including Jeff Malka, Judy Simon, Dan Laby, myself and others. She knows her way around the archives and her multi-lingual talents are put to good use translating documents in old Catalan, Latin and more. We first met years ago when I spoke at Congregation Atid in Barcelona, and conducted a hand’s-on workshop on Jewish genealogy – Maria Jose was one of the students and we’ve been good friends ever since. A former attorney, her research skills are impeccable. Genealogy became her focus as she helped her maternal uncle, a well-known author and physician, prepare a work on medieval medical doctors (many of whom were Jewish) and conducted extensive archival research. Her maternal family comes from around Lerida (also known as Lleida), about 140 km northwest of Barcelona, and she discovered our TALALAY family’s first two documents in Spain. Most recently, she has been preparing a report on her investigations into the Cervera, Spain, archives, a rich primary resource for the history of medieval Sephardic Jews, for the International Institute of Jewish Genealogy . Maria Jose will be speaking in Ravenna, Italy at July’s EAJS (European Association of Jewish Studies) Congress, where she will present “Connecting with the Lives and Lineages of Medieval Catalan Jews.” Other speakers focusing on Jewish genealogy at that conference will be: — Valts Apinis, University of Riga: “Jews in Latvia in 1918-1940: a Genealogical Perspective.” — Federica Francesconi, University of Bologna and UCLA: “An Alternative Path toward Emancipation: Jewish; Merchants and their Cross-Cultural Networks in 18th Century Italian Ghettos.” — Neville Lamdan, Hebrew University, Jerusalem:“ Village Jews in the 19th Century Minsk Gubernya through a Genealogical Lens.” According to director Neville Lamdan, in the International Institute of Jewish Genealogy’s semi-annual report: Perhaps the most exciting research results to be reported recently were received from Mrs. Maria Jose Surribas-Camps in Barcelona regarding her study into the “Lives and Lineages of

Continued here:
Spain: Cervera archives update report



Ruth Yael


