William of Malmesbury states that
William the Conqueror brought Jews from
Rouen to England during the
Norman Conquest. William the Conqueror's object may be inferred: his policy was to get
feudal dues paid to the
royal treasury in coin rather than in kind, and for this purpose it was necessary to have a body of men scattered through the country who would supply quantities of coin.
Status of Jews Prior to their expulsion in 1290, the status of Jews in England was completely dependent on the will of
the Crown. As a result of the Fourth Lateran Council in 1215, Christian authority, in the guise of the king, imposed certain discriminatory practices upon the Jews of England, one being the mandate on the wearing of a badge symbolising the two
Tablets of Stone. The year 1215 also coincided with the two entries in the
Magna Carta, dated 15 June, regarding debts due to Jews. In return for their economic function (providing credit as a source of revenue for the Crown), Jews were offered some privileges and protection under the jurisdiction of the king. As "royal serfs", they were allowed freedom of the king's
highways, exemption from tolls, the ability to hold land directly from the king, and physical protection in the vast network of royal castles built to assert Norman authority. The Jews of London were the responsibility of the
Constable of the Tower and for this reason they were able to seek refuge in the
Tower of London when at risk of mob violence. This was resorted to on a number of occasions, with large numbers staying there, sometimes for months at a time. There are records of a body of Jewish men-at-arms forming part of the garrison of the
Tower in 1267, during a civil conflict, the Second Barons' War. A clause to that effect was inserted under
Henry I in some manuscripts of the so-called
Leges Edwardi Confessoris ("Laws of Edward the Confessor"). Henry granted a charter to Rabbi Joseph, the chief
Rabbi of London, and his followers. Under this charter, Jews were permitted to move about the country without paying tolls, to buy and sell, to sell their pledges after holding them a year and a day, to be tried by their peers, and to be sworn on the
Torah rather than on a
Christian Bible. Special weight was attributed to a Jew's oath, which was valid against that of twelve Christians. The sixth clause of the charter was especially important: it granted to Jews the right to move wherever they wanted, as if they were the king's own property ("sicut res propriæ nostræ"). English Jews experienced a "golden age" of sorts under
Henry II in the late 12th century due to huge economic expansion and increased demand for credit. Major Jewish fortunes were made in London,
Oxford,
Lincoln,
Bristol, and
Norwich. The Crown, in turn, capitalized on the prosperity of its Jews. In addition to many arbitrary taxes,
Richard I established the Ordinance of the Jewry in 1194 in an attempt to organize the Jewish community. It ensured that mandatory records would be kept by royal officials for all Jewish transactions. Every debt was recorded on a chirography to allow the king immediate and complete access to Jewish property. Richard also established a special exchequer to collect any unpaid debts due after the death of a Jewish creditor. The establishment of the
Exchequer of the Jews eventually made all transactions of the English Jewry liable to taxation by the king in addition to the 10% of all sums recovered by Jews with the help of English courts. External pressures such as the circulating myth of the
blood libel, the religious tensions in light of the
Crusades, and the interference of
Pope Innocent III in the late 12th century created an increasingly violent environment for English Jews.
Mob violence increased against the Jews in London,
Norwich, and
Lynn. Entire Jewries were murdered in
York. Because of their financial utility, however, English Jews were still offered royal protection, and
Richard I continued to renew orders to protect the Jews, formalizing the Exchequer and designating "
archae", or centralized record chests monitored by panels of local Christian and Jewish key holders to better protect records of all Jewish transactions. To do so, they had to sell off many of their mortgage bonds to wealthy nobles. The Jews then became a focal point of those debtors' hatred and mass violence spiked again in the mid-13th century. Their legal status, however, did not change until Henry's son,
Edward I, took control of the Jewries. He issued restrictive statutes, forbidding them from taking any more property into bond, the means by which they could lend money and how they lived. With almost all means of income denied them and property being confiscated, the Jewish population diminished. New waves of crusading zeal in the 1280s in conjunction with debt resentment pressured Edward into the expulsion of the depleted Jewish community in 1290.
Attitudes of the kings and the church .
Gentile-Jewish relations in England were disturbed under
King Stephen, who burned down the house of a Jew in
Oxford (some accounts say with a Jew in it) because he refused to pay a contribution to the king's expenses. In 1144, came the first report in history of the
blood libel against Jews; it came up in the case of
William of Norwich (1144). In his 2010 book, Julius argues that
blood libel is the key, because it incorporates the themes that Jews are malevolent, constantly conspiring against Christians, powerful, and merciless. Variations include stories about Jews poisoning wells, twisting minds, and buying and selling Christian souls and bodies. While the
Crusaders were killing Jews in
Germany, outbursts against Jews in England were, according to Jewish chroniclers, prevented by King Stephen. With the restoration of order under
Henry II, Jews renewed their activity. Within five years of his accession Jews were found at
London,
Oxford,
Cambridge,
Norwich,
Thetford,
Bungay,
Canterbury,
Winchester,
Stafford,
Windsor, and
Reading. Yet they were not permitted to bury their dead elsewhere than in London, a restriction which was not removed till 1177. Their spread throughout the country enabled the king to draw upon their resources as occasion demanded. He repaid them with demand notes on the sheriffs of the counties, who accounted for payments thus made in the half-yearly accounts on the
pipe rolls (see
Aaron of Lincoln).
Strongbow's conquest of
Ireland (1170) was in part financed by Josce, a Jew of Gloucester; and the king accordingly fined Josce, five pounds, for having lent money to those under his displeasure, pipe rolls also indicate Strongbow borrowed monies from Aaron of Lincoln. As a rule, however, Henry II does not appear to have limited in any way the financial activity of Jews. The favourable position of English Jews was shown, among other things, by the visit of
Abraham ibn Ezra in 1158, by that of
Isaac of Chernigov in 1181, and by the immigration to England of Jews who were exiled from the king's properties in
France by
Philip Augustus in 1182, among them probably being
Judah Sir Leon of Paris. When, however, he asked the rest of the country to pay a
tithe for the Crusade against
Saladin in 1188, he demanded a quarter of all Jewish
chattels. The so-called "
Saladin tithe" was reckoned at £70,000, the quarter at £60,000. In other words, the value of the personal property of Jews was regarded as one-fourth that of the whole country. It is improbable, however, that the whole amount was paid at once, as for many years after the imposition of the
tallage, arrears were demanded from the recalcitrant Jews. The king had probably been led to make this large demand on English Jewry's money by the surprising windfall which came to his treasury at Aaron's death in 1186. All property obtained by usury, whether by Jew or by Christian, fell into the king's hands on the death of the usurer; Aaron of Lincoln's estate included £15,000 worth of debts owed to him. Besides this, Aaron's large fortune passed to King Henry but much of it was lost on the journey to the royal coffers in Normandy. A special branch of the treasury, known as "
Aaron's Exchequer", John and Henry III both overtaxed the Jews, regarding them as an easy source of income. The result was that Jews were forced by the crown to pull in all overdue debts, and as debt was generally secured against land, this meant dispossessing members of the middling gentry of the source of their feudal status, land. The crown's immediate allies, in their inner circle and court, benefited from these sales as they picked up these assets cheaply; Jews could not by law hold onto land holdings. This repeated cycle bred resentment and anti-Jewish sentiment, but monarchs continued this process until Jewish assets had in essence run out. Henry III's official attitudes moved from protection to hostility when he became the first monarch to lend credence to a
blood libel, when he ordered investigations and arrests of Jews concerning the death of a child,
Hugh, in Lincoln. He was locally venerated, and stories about him this clearly circulated widely, including in prose and folk songs.
Persecution and expulsion The persecution of England's Jews built up from the late twelfth century, and was brutal. Massacres were recorded in London, Northampton and
York during the crusades in 1189 and 1190. The massacre at York was mentioned by
William of Newburgh that it was carried out less for religious reasons, but instead for greed. In 1269,
Henry III made blasphemy by Jews a hanging offence, and when Edward returned from Crusade, he passed the
Statute of the Jewry in 1275. The number of Jews were around 2,000–3,000 in England by the 1270s. They were much less capable of generating income for the Crown, as they had been overtaxed and their capital was much eroded. Overtaxation inevitably led to overdue debts being foreclosed, meaning that the lands of middling Knights and gentry being bought up by the biggest landowners, notoriously including Queen Eleanor and other members of the court. This process had fuelled anti-Semitism among the forces opposing the crown centred around
Simon de Montfort during Henry III's time. During the
Second Barons' War in the 1260s, de Montfort's forces led a series of pogroms in many English cities where Jewish communities were attacked, and debt records captured and destroyed. During Edward's reign, anti-Semitism moved from being used by opponents of the crown, to being "deliberately deployed and developed in the interests of the English state". While financial considerations may have played a part in his actions leading to the expulsion of the Jews, it is important to note Edward's "sincere religious bigotry". Shortly after Edward returned from the Crusades, in order to assuage concerns among the landed classes and in Parliament, he passed the
Statute of the Jewry in 1275. To finance his
war against Wales in 1276,
Edward I of England
taxed Jewish moneylenders. When the moneylenders could no longer pay the tax, they were accused of disloyalty. Already restricted to a limited number of occupations, Edward abolished their "privilege" to lend money, restricted their movements and activities and forced Jews to wear a yellow patch. On 17 November 1278, the heads of households of the Jews of England, believed to have numbered around 600 out of a population of 2-3,000, were arrested on suspicion of
coin clipping and counterfeiting, and Jewish homes in England were searched. At the time, coin clipping was a widespread practice, which both Jews and Christians were involved in. A financial crisis had resulted in pressure to act against coin clippers. In 1275, coin clipping was made a capital offence, and in 1278, raids on suspected
coin clippers were carried out. According to the Bury Chronicle, "All Jews in England of whatever condition, age or sex were unexpectedly seized … and sent for imprisonment to various castles throughout England. While they were thus imprisoned, the innermost recesses of their houses were ransacked." Some 600 were detained in the
Tower of London. More than 300 are known to have been executed in 1279, with 298 being killed in London alone. Some of those who could afford to buy a pardon and had a patron at the royal court escaped punishment.
Edward I increasingly showed
antisemitism as, in 1280, he granted a right to levy a toll on the rivulet bridge at
Brentford "for the passage of goods over it, with a special tax at the rate of 1
d. each for Jews and Jewesses on horse, ½d. each on foot; other travellers were exempt". This antipathy eventually culminated in his legislating for the expulsion of all Jews from the country in 1290. Most were only allowed to take what they could carry. A small number of Jews favoured by the king were permitted to sell their properties first, though most of the money and property of these dispossessed Jews was confiscated. A monk,
Gregory of Huntingdon, purchased all the Jewish texts he could to begin translating them, ensuring that at least some of what they had written and created was preserved. ==Resettlement period, 1290 to 1800==