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New UCL collection of Jewish pamphlets catalogues history of Jews in Britain

Newly archived collection of pamphlets reveal Jews’ tangled relationship with queen and country

August 27, 2015 12:10
Sermon preached in London's Jews Synagogue in 1756

By

Colin Shindler,

Colin Shindler

2 min read

In one pamphlet, the Sephardim of Bevis Marks express their relief in a special prayer that Queen Victoria had survived an assassination attempt at Constitution Hill in June 1840.

Another is a declaration of fealty to the crown by the Portsmouth Jewish community when King George III visited the town in June 1773.

Elsewhere, there are documents arguing against the "Jew Bill" of 1753, which proposed the naturalisation of British Jews without their having to take a decidedly Christian oath.

The history of the Jews in Britain is a tale of belonging, rejection and much in between - and University College London's newly catalogued, 4000-strong collection of Jewish pamphlets provides the full, kaleidoscopic picture of the struggle for Jewish emancipation.

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