User:Ivo Jacome
Ivo Jacome, an Israeli national, was born in Brazil, in August 26th, to Eunice, may she live a long life, and Raimundo Jacome, of blessed memory. The genealogy of the Jacome family, originates in Mallorca, in the Ballearics, Spain. Jacome de Maiorca, as he was better known in Portugal, arrived in that kingdom shortly after the discovery of Madeira island, probably in the early 1420s. He would have been pushing seventy years of age, at his very youngest. It has been claimed that he was forced to emigrate, due to Jewish persecution. Jahuda (also Judah) Cresques, the name by which he was originally known, was born in the Iberian province of Catalonia, probably on the island of Majorca in or around 1350, give or take a few years. At an early age, he took up the trade of his father, Abraham Cresques, who was a noted cartographer and instrument maker in the town of Palma. Abraham (d. 1387), sometimes called "Cresques lo Juheu", is best known as the creator of the Catalan world atlas of 1375, the most famous example of medieval cartography. Although some attempt has been made to attribute this atlas to Jahuda, the most reasoned opinion is that it was, at best, a joint father-son effort. In 1391, Christians in the Aragonese kingdom, to which Catalonia was subject, were incited to violence by the fiery sermons of a popular Dominican friar named Vicente Ferrer who called for the conversion to Christianity of all Jews in the country. The subsequent search for Jews to convert soon became a widespread slaughter as rampaging mobs, unable to control their fury, killed Jews in the thousands. In some areas, Jewish residents were virtually annihilated. In the Ballearics (which includes Majorca), more than 300 were killed in a single day. Another view is found in Duarte Pacheco's "ESMERALDO DE SITU ORBIS" written in 1505-8. Translated, it reads: "Further, he [Prince Henry] sent to Majorca for Master Jacome, a skilled maker of charts - it was on this island that these charts were first made - and by many gifts and favors brought him to these realms, where he taught this skill to men who in turn taught men who are alive at the present time ..." In other words, Jacome came to make charts, or at least to teach others to make charts. Further, according to the late Prof. Armando Cortesדo of Coimbra University, the Catalan Jew must have also taught others his skill in making instruments, given the primitive nature of what was then known about navigational science and the need of Portuguese navigators to find their way at sea. In summary, the picture of Jacome de Maiorca that emerges from the few bits of written material that have come down to us is of a Catalan Jew who followed the mapmaking and instrument making profession of his talented father.