While many prominent German Jews converted to Christianity in the early nineteenth century, Bella, like her sister Sara, remained faithful to Judaism. Bella disowned her son Jakob when he converted to Christianity in 1805. She apparently did not react in a similar way when her daughter Lea and her husband Abraham converted, although they were living in her mansion at the time. Her gift of the manuscript of the
St Matthew Passion to her grandson came only a few months after his parents conversion, and shortly before her own death. However when Bella died an examination of her will showed that she had reinstated her son Jacob to his inheritance, and part of her estate was left to him. The remainder was divided between the children of her granddaughters Josephine Benedicks and Marianne Mendelssohn and Lea’s unborn grandchildren. Lea herself, and her husband Abraham, had been cut out entirely, possibly because they had tried to keep their conversion secret from her. Bella Salomon died in Berlin on 9 March 1824 at the age of 74. ==References==