Construction The origins of the community date from an influx to London of
crypto-Jews, or so called
Marranos, from Spain and Portugal, mostly via the growing
Sephardi Jewish community in
Amsterdam, in the early seventeenth century. These Jews began practising their religion openly once it became possible to do so through
Jewish resettlement in England under the rule of
Oliver Cromwell. Services at a small synagogue in Creechurch Lane began in 1657, and the congregation also secured land for its own cemetery in
Mile End (the
Velho Cemetery). In 1663, it was visited on the festival of
Simchat Torah by the diarist
Samuel Pepys, who recorded his impressions of the service. In 1698
Rabbi David Nieto took spiritual charge of the congregation of "Spanish and Portuguese Jews" (
Sephardim). A considerable influx of Jews made it necessary to obtain more commodious quarters. Accordingly, a committee was appointed, consisting of António Gomes Serra, Menasseh Mendes, Isaac Israel de Sequeira alias Alfonso Rodrigues, Manuel Nunez Miranda, Andrea Lopez, and Pontaleão Rodriguez. It investigated matters for nearly a year and, on 12 February 1699, signed a contract with Joseph Avis, a
Quaker, for the construction of a building to cost £2,650. According to legend, Avis declined to collect his full fee, on the ground that it was wrong to profit from building a house of God. Also unsubstantiated is the story that a timber was donated by the then
Princess Anne for the roof of the synagogue. On 24 June 1699, the committee leased from Sir Thomas and Lady Pointz (also known as Littleton) a tract of land at Plough Yard, in Bevis Marks, for 61 years, with the option of renewal for a further 38 years, at £120 a year. The structure was completed and dedicated in September 1701. The interior decor and furnishing and layout of the synagogue reflect the influence of the great
Portuguese Synagogue of Amsterdam of 1675. It has been claimed that the design was also influenced by
Christopher Wren, the architect of the nearby
St Paul's Cathedral. The roof was destroyed by fire in 1738 and repaired in 1749. During the
London Blitz the synagogue's silver, records and fittings were removed to a place of safety; the synagogue suffered only minor damage. The synagogue suffered some collateral damage from the
IRA in 1992 and the
1993 Bishopsgate bombing, but this was restored. The essential original structure of the building thus remains today. In 1747
Benjamin Mendes da Costa bought the lease of the ground on which the building stood, and presented it to the congregation, vesting the deeds in the names of a committee consisting of Gabriel Lopez de Britto, David Aboab Ozorio, Moses Gomes Serra, David Franco, Joseph Jessurun Rodriguez, and
Moses Mendes da Costa. The community saw a significant influx of crypto-Jews from Portugal fleeing the inquisition during the seventeenth and eighteenth century. Marriage and circumcision records record couples as "Vindos de Portugal", or more rarely "Vindos de Espanha", for the purpose of reconsecrating their vows now they were free to practice Judaism openly or undertaking an adult circumcision. Alongside migration from Sephardi centres such as Amsterdam and
Livorno there was a steady influx of refugees from Portugal up until around 1735, after which it diminished, with some of the last recorded arrivals from Portugal as late as 1790. Records show arrivals escaping principally from major cities such as
Lisbon or
Porto and the remote borderland region from Spain, such as from
Celorico da Beira,
Guarda,
Braganza or
Belmonte. As a result of this migration the sermon at Bevis Marks took place in Portuguese until as late as 1833 when they switched to English.
Influence For Sephardic Jews, the Bevis Marks Synagogue was a religious centre of the Anglo-Jewish world for more than a century, and served as a clearing-house for congregational and individual Jewish problems all over the world. These included the appeal of Jews in
Jamaica for a reduction in taxation (1736), the internecine quarrel among Jews in
Barbados (1753), and the aiding of seven-year-old
Moses de Paz, who escaped from
Gibraltar in 1777 to avoid a forced conversion to Christianity. The congregation came to the aid of the
Jewish community in Ireland by donating funds to build a wall around the
Ballybough Cemetery and providing an agent to oversee the works. The deeds for the cemetery were then lodged at Bevis Marks Synagogue. Through the actions of the leading synagogue member
Moses Montefiore the synagogue was also involved in the 19th century in the
Damascus Affair and the
Mortara Affair, two events provoking much international discussion of Jewish rights and reputation. It was part of the inspiration for
Jacob Sassoon's
Ohel Rachel Synagogue in
Shanghai, the largest synagogue in the
Far East. Amongst the Chief Rabbis of the Anglo-Sephardic Community (
Hahamim) who have served at Bevis Marks have been Daniel Nieto (1654–1728),
Benjamin Artom (1835–1879), Abraham Haliva (Halua) (1791-1853) and
Moses Gaster (1856–1939). Amongst other notable members of the synagogue's congregation have been author and educator
Miriam Mendes Belisario, the boxer
Daniel Mendoza, and
Isaac D'Israeli (father of
Benjamin Disraeli), who resigned from the congregation after an argument over synagogue fees.
Expansion of the community As the Spanish and Portuguese Jewish community grew and moved out of the City and East End of London to the West End and the suburbs, members demanded a new synagogue to be built in the West End. When the leadership refused this, some members formed a breakaway synagogue in Burton Street, which later became the
West London Synagogue. In 1853 a branch synagogue was opened in Wigmore Street; in 1866 this moved to Bryanston Street,
Bayswater. Attendance at Bevis Marks declined so much that in 1886 a move to sell the site was contemplated; a "Bevis Marks Anti-Demolition League" was founded, under the auspices of
H. Guedalla and A. H. Newman, and the proposed move was abandoned. In 1896 a new synagogue was built at
Lauderdale Road,
Maida Vale, as successor to the Bryanston Street synagogue. A second satellite congregation was established at 46 Forty Avenue, Wembley during the 1960s.
Events in the twentieth century On 10 April 1992, the synagogue was affected by an
IRA terrorist attack on the Baltic Exchange. The bomb was contained in a large white truck and consisted of a fertiliser device wrapped with a detonation cord made from
Semtex. The Chairman of Buildings for the Spanish & Portuguese Congregation, Mr Barry Musikant, donning a hard hat and escorted by police, was one of the first people to enter the cordoned area of streets to examine the damage to the synagogue. He, with the agreement of the insurance company, put in place a programme of repair which lasted fifteen weeks, but enabled the building to be restored before his daughter's wedding. The following year the synagogue was also affected by an
attack on Bishopsgate. Nearly £200,000 was raised by donation to help with the renovations to return it to its former glory. In June 2019, it was awarded £2.7m by the
National Lottery for conservation work and to cover half the costs of building a new religious and cultural centre. In early 2021, it received £497,000 from the Government's Culture Recovery Fund "to protect its collection of significant objects and illuminate the history of the site." In 2020 and 2021 there was considerable opposition to planning applications for two nearby skyscrapers which would cut off natural light to the synagogue, threatening its ongoing use for daily services. The community had said the historic synagogue faces a closure threat as the loss of light would render services "almost impossible". Plans to build both tower blocks were ultimately denied by City of London councillors. In 2023, the Creechurch Conservation Area was approved, which should protect Bevis Marks and Grade II* St Botolph's-without-Aldgate from development. ==Features==