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Creechurch Lane SynagogueCity of London, London E.C.3. |
A Brief History of the Creechurch Lane Synagogue
The First Synagogue in Britain following the Readmission
David Shulman
Updated 6 December 2006
All Jews had been expelled from England by King Edward I in 1290. However, by the end of the first half of the seventeenth century, there was a small but influential community of Marranos or 'secret Jews', in London, living outwardly as Spanish Catholics.
As a result of the efforts of Menasseh Ben Israel, a noted scholar from Amsterdam, Oliver Cromwell, the English ruler, called a national conference at Whitehall in the early part of December 1655, to discuss the formal readmission of the Jews to England. Those summoned to attend included Puritan religious leaders, merchants and some of the most eminent judges and lawyers in the country. The judges and lawyers declared that there was no law preventing the Jews from residing in England, as the 1290 expulsion had only applied to the Jews who were then resident in England. However, both religious leaders and merchants - for very different reasons - opposed the readmission. This led to Cromwell stopping further discussion in order to prevent an adverse decision.
War broke out between England and Spain in 1655 and, in the following year, all Spanish possessions in England, including those of the 'secret Jews', were subject to expropriation by the English authorities. The expropriated property included two ships belonging to Antonio Robles, possibly the wealthiest member of the community. At this point, Robles declared himself to be a Jew and not a Spanish Catholic. The Council of State upheld his claim and restored his property to him. In light of the Council recognition of the Jewish community in London, gave informal permission for the Jews to live and trade in England, so as long as they did not advertise their worship and they refrained from making converts.
On 19 December 1656, the Jews, now practising openly, acquired a house in Creechurch Lane in the City of London, which opened as a synagogue the next year, and at about the same time purchased a piece of land in Mile End for a cemetery.
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