In about
1370, the Jewish community of Strasbourg had two accused
moserim who had been informing the knights of
Andlau about the community. Schlettstadt constituted a court against these two men, and the court eventually sentenced these men to death. They were successful in carrying out the sentence against one of them, named Salamin. The other escaped,
converted to
Christianity and informed the knights of the proceedings. The knights along with an armed mob came to Strasbourg for the purpose of exacting vengeance on Schlettstadt, who was able to secure refuge in the castle of
Hohelandsberg, near
Colmar. He petitioned the leaders of the community to intervene on his behalf; such intervention did not come and he remained in confinement for six years. Schlettstadt left his hiding place in
1376 and traveled to
Babylonia where he brought a complaint before the
nasi against the leaders of the Strasbourg community. With the support of the rabbinate of Jerusalem, the nasi wrote a
cherem. The identity of the writer of the ban seems to be unknown --- there are sources, that believe the nasi mentioned here was the Exilarch
David ben Hodiah, but this is not possible as Hodiah lived two centuries earlier. ==Return from exile==