"Pallache" – also de Palacio(s), Palache, Palaçi, Palachi, Palacci, Palaggi, al-Fallashi, and many other variations (documented below) – is the surname of a prominent, Ladino-speaking, Sephardic Jewish family from the Iberian Peninsula, who spread mostly through the Mediterranean after the Alhambra Decree of March 31, 1492, and related events.
Interior of Synagogue of El Transito
Cordoba Synagogue entrance hall from prayer hall
Jewish Wedding in Morocco by Eugène Delacroix, Louvre, Paris
The Jewish Cemetery by Jacob van Ruisdael, where Samuel Pallache, his brother, and descendants lie buried
Samuel Pallache was a Jewish Moroccan merchant, diplomat, and pirate of the Pallache family, who, as envoy, concluded a treaty with the Dutch Republic in 1608. His antecedents fled to Morocco during the Reconquista. Appointed as an agent under the Saadi Sultan Zidan Abu Maali, Pallache traveled to the newly-independent Dutch Republic to discuss diplomatic terms with the Dutch against their mutual enemy, the Spanish. He died in the Netherlands, brought there due to the intervention of his ally, Maurice of Nassau, who helped him when he was arrested by the Spanish.
Beth Haim in Ouderkerk aan de Amstel
Abraham Palacci, a 19th-century relative of Samuel.