History

3 History claim verifications about Spain Spain ×

“The Treaty of Tordesillas was signed in 1494 to divide newly discovered lands between Spain and Portugal.”

True

The claim matches the historical record. The Treaty of Tordesillas was signed in 1494 and established a line intended to allocate overseas lands between the Spanish and Portuguese crowns. The main caveat is technical: “Spain” is a modern shorthand for the crowns of Castile and Aragon, and the treaty also covered future discoveries, not only lands already known.

“Contemporary observers recognized that expelling Jews from Spain would cause economic damage.”

Mostly True

The historical evidence shows that some contemporaries did anticipate economic harm from expelling Jews from Spain. Scholarly sources describe municipal elites and other observers warning about the loss of taxpayers, financial expertise, and skilled residents. But the record supports a limited claim about identifiable observers, not a broad contemporaneous consensus, and the famous Bayezid II quote is not solid contemporaneous evidence.

“Jews in late-15th-century Spain comprised a disproportionate share of essential professionals such as physicians, administrators, tax collectors, translators, and traders.”

Mostly True

Scholarly histories and reference works support that Spain’s small Jewish population was overrepresented in several high-value occupations, especially medicine, royal finance, tax farming, administration, translation, and long-distance trade. The main caveat is scope: this was concentrated in particular urban and court-connected networks, not among most Jews, and some late-15th-century evidence blurs Jews with conversos.