In 1290, King
Edward I of England had issued an
edict expelling all Jews from England. However, the
English Reformation, which started in the 1530s, brought a number of changes that benefited Jews in the long term. Doctrines and rituals of the Roman Catholic church that insulted Jews were eliminated, especially those that emphasised their roles as
deicides. Further
anti-Catholicism, with the Pope as
antichrist, came to replace antisemitism. The period of the
English Civil Wars and
Interregnum was marked by both widespread
millennial beliefs and a beginning of religious tolerance. Significantly, millenarianism in England often had a strong
Hebraist character, that emphasised the study of Hebrew and Judaism. This was sometimes extended by certain individuals to claim the English as the
descendants of the Ten lost tribes of Israel, with Cromwell himself numbering amongst the supporters of this idea. After both the
Alhambra Decree of 1492, which expelled Jews from Spain in 1492, and
similar measures in Portugal in 1496, some
converso traders (Jewish converts to Christianity, who often
practised Judaism in secret, sometimes also known as
New Christians or derogatively as
Marranos) settled in London and Bristol. The small community was largely linked by trade to Antwerp, and was expelled altogether in 1609. It was with London's growing importance as a trading city that Jews from the Netherlands began to settle in the country once more from the 1630s. It is from this first that the current Jewish population of the UK has grown.
Religious toleration and liberty of conscience The 1640s and 1650s in England were marked by intense debates about religious tolerance, marked by speeches and tracts by radical puritans and dissenters who called for liberty of conscience. This extreme diversity of opinion about religious toleration was sorted into 12 schools of thought in the study of the period by
W.K. Jordan. John Coffey uses a simpler three-point schema: anti-tolerationists, conservative tolerationists, and radical tolerationists, pointing out that although the latter were in a minority, they formed an important part of the debate. Nonetheless it is important to remember that although figures such as
William Walwyn,
Henry Vane,
John Milton, and others made powerful apologia for religious toleration, their frame of reference was theological, rather than secular in nature and they were not calling for religious pluralism as is understood today. The early and mid Seventeenth century was also marked by a rise in Hebraism, the study of Jewish scriptures, which were often used to discuss political issues such as the existence of a monarchy or republic, and religious toleration. This debate used Jewish sources to justify its conclusions. The most prominent scholar in the field was the MP and jurist
John Selden, whose thought was influenced by
Thomas Erastus and
Grotius. Selden proposed minimal government intervention on matters of religion, a view he modelled on the
Hebrew Commonwealth. He in turn influenced similar approaches in
John Milton (whose plea for freedom of the press, the
Areopagitica (1644), directly named him),
Thomas Hobbes and
James Harrington (the latter of whom proposed settling Jews in Ireland in his book
The Commonwealth of Oceana). Overall the strongest political group of the 1640s and '50s, the English Puritans, had a negative view of toleration, seeing it as a concession to evil and heresy. It was often associated with tolerating the heresies of
Arminianism, the philosophy of free will and free thought, and
Socinianism, a doctrine of
Anti-trinitarianism. But despite this Puritan hostility to toleration, England did see a certain religious laissez-faire emerge (for instance, the
Rump Parliament repealed the
recusancy laws in 1650). This was partly due to the impossibility of stopping religious free expression, but it also became a part of the cause of the
new model army. The doctrinal policies of the protectorate were largely conservative. However, this Puritan train of thought could also point towards liberty of conscience. For
Congregationalists, truth lay in the spirit rather than institutions. Like the
Platonists, they searched for internal unity amidst external diversity. Further, Puritans valued conscience, which could be neither forced nor tested, over ritual and ceremony. So rather than toleration, the key debate among key figures in the Protectorate revolved around
liberty of conscience. For
Blair Worden, Cromwell's religious policy was rooted in a search for union of believers, rather than toleration of differing beliefs, and religious persecution was the largest obstacle to this union. However, liberty of conscience extended only to "God's peculiar" and not heretics (such as
Quakers,
Socinians, and
Ranters). There was a great increase of religious freedom and the ecclesiastical diversity in Cromwellian England. This marked a revolutionary change and led to increasing toleration in the years after the interregnum ended. On the one hand, the loosely Calvinist Cromwell allowed the punishment of men such as the
Unitarian John Biddle and the
Quaker James Nayler, and accepted the restrictions on religious tolerance found in the
Humble Petition and Advice of 1657. But on the other hand, his entourage included men who wanted more liberty of belief than he allowed. These non-sectarian 'merciful men' or
politiques, who wanted to understand and tolerate beliefs different to their own, included
Bulstrode Whitelocke,
Matthew Hale, and
Sir Charles Worsley.
Millenarian 'admissionists' The toleration of Jews was largely borne by the hope of
converting them to Christianity.
Leonard Busher was one of the first to call for the readmission of the Jews to England and the toleration of their faith in 1616. Lawyer and MP,
Henry Finch and the scholar
Joseph Mede both wrote of the benefits of the conversion of the Jews in the 1620s. The Scottish minister
John Wemyss advocated readmitting Jews to Christian lands with a view to converting them in the 1630s. So, by the 1640s, the imminent conversion of the Jews was a widespread belief among Puritans. Indeed during that decade the Christians who were most liberal towards Jews are also those who were most committed to their conversion. A number of these 'admissionists' were close to Cromwell, including
John Sadler,
John Dury, and
Hugh Peter. Other notable readmissionists include exiled Royalist cleric
Thomas Barlow and the Dissenter
Henry Jessey. The
Fifth Monarchy Men were another example of Puritan millenarians who saw the readmission of the Jews as hastening the kingdom of Christ. The exiled Royalist
Sir Edward Nicholas is one of the few admissionists who did not seem interested in conversion. By contrast, the anti-admissionists were often animated by the belief that it would be difficult or impossible to convert the Jews.
William Prynne's anti-Semitic pamphlet
A Short Demurrer, which was printed on the eve of the Whitehall Conference, and the pamphlet
Anglo-Judaeus or The History of the Jews Whilst Here in England by W.H. both doubt that the Jews would be converted once in England. Many millenarians at the time emphasised the chosen role of England in God's plan, and this was often accompanied by the identification the Jews as the true Israel of the Bible. Indeed, they saw the Jews as a superior group, sharing some characteristics with the chosen nation of England. This belief was rooted in the literal interpretation of the Biblical primacy of the Jews found in the writings of
Thomas Brightman. This meant that if the Jews were specially favoured by God, the English must listen to their appeals for help. These philo-semitic figures, who also believed in the restoration of the Jews to the Holy Land, included
Jeremiah Burroughs,
Peter Bulkeley (whose father had given Brightman's funeral sermon),
John Fenwicke, and
John Cotton. == 1649 to 1654: First steps towards resettlement ==