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Zaki Cooper

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Zaki Cooper,

Zaki Cooper

Opinion

Anglo-Jewry's 350-year start

August 21, 2014 12:23
3 min read

What does 1664 make you think of? Alcohol connoisseurs may think of the 1664 Kronenburg beer, and who could blame them? It is apparently the most popular French beer in the world.

But more sober-minded historical types will appreciate that 1664 was a significant year for British Jewry. Exactly 350 years ago this week, a landmark letter was issued by the new King's Privy Council addressed at the fledgling Jewish community. The letter, dated August 22 1664, said that the Jews could "promise themselves the effects of the same favour as formerly they have had, so long as they demean themselves peaceably and quietly, with due obedience to His Majesty's laws and without scandal to his government."

This effectively set the terms for the newly established community, a sort of "social contract", after an absence of almost 400 years in the Middle Ages. You behave yourselves, and the UK will treat you well. As the doyen of Anglos-Jewish historians, Cecil Roth, has written: "The residence of the Jews of England was authorised for the first time in writing."

The background to the letter is that the Jewish community had recently resettled in the UK only eight years earlier under Oliver Cromwell, after expulsion in 1290. With King Charles II's restoration to the throne in 1760, the Jews felt insecure. They did not know how the new monarch would react to them. It was, after all, during the short interregnum, when the UK was effectively a republic, that Jews had been given the nod to return to living in the country.