Auction 90 Fine Judaica Including: Printed Books, Manuscripts,  Graphic & Ceremonial Arts
Jul 21, 2020 (your local time)
USA
 Brooklyn Navy Yard: Building 77 Suite 1108 Brooklyn NY, 11205
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LOT 76:

(ANGLO-JUDAICA).
A Modest Apology for the Citizens and Merchants of London, Who Petitioned the House of ...

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(ANGLO-JUDAICA).
A Modest Apology for the Citizens and Merchants of London, Who Petitioned the House of Commons Against Naturalizing the Jews.




pp. viii, 16. Marginal dampstains. Recent boards. 8vo. Roth, Magna Bibliotheca Anglo-Judaica, p. 220, no. 90
London: for W. Webb 1753
“The Jews have exceedingly troubled our City of late, and they are like to trouble it much longer.” The ill-fated "Jew Bill" of 1753 provoked an extensive public debate over Jewish status in England. Upon its passing in May, 1753, the "Jewish Naturalization Bill" (properly titled) allowed foreign-born Jews to be naturalized without the requirement to receive the Sacrament. Thereafter a noisy campaign was mounted to have the bill repealed. The language of the debate turned ugly, the masses were whipped into near hysteria, and Jewish peddlers were roughed up. Just six months later, Parliament repealed the Act, so that England's Jews would remain second-class citizens. Indeed Jewish legal status stayed unchanged well into the following century. See T.M. Endelman, The Jews of Britain 1656 to 2000 (2002) pp. 74-76.
“The Jews have exceedingly troubled our City of late, and they are like to trouble it much longer.” The ill-fated "Jew Bill" of 1753 provoked an extensive public debate over Jewish status in England. Upon its passing in May, 1753, the "Jewish Naturalization Bill" (properly titled) allowed foreign-born Jews to be naturalized without the requirement to receive the Sacrament. Thereafter a noisy campaign was mounted to have the bill repealed. The language of the debate turned ugly, the masses were whipped into near hysteria, and Jewish peddlers were roughed up. Just six months later, Parliament repealed the Act, so that England's Jews would remain second-class citizens. Indeed Jewish legal status stayed unchanged well into the following century. See T.M. Endelman, The Jews of Britain 1656 to 2000 (2002) pp. 74-76.

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