Despite this hostility, Jews created communities all over the world. The illustration shows Jewish communities in medieval England. King Henry III instituted repressive laws intended to segregate and oppress Jews. The Statute of Jewry in 1253 had 13 articles, some of which are listed here:
Article One: Jews could live in England provided that they serve the king in some manner. (This might include financial support or civil service.)
Article Two stated that no new synagogues could be constructed.
Article Three: Jews in synagogues must keep their voices low while praying so that no one else could hear them.
Article Four: Jews must donate money to their local Christian church.
Article Five banned Christians from working for Jews or living in Jews' houses.
Article Six banned Jews from eating meat during Lent.
Article Seven: Jews may not publicly dispute the Christian faith.
Article Eight banned romantic relations between Christians and Jews.
Contemporary historian Matthew Paris followed the Augustinian view of Jews, and did not approve of Henry's policies regarding them, which mirrored the papal view at the time (Innocent IV). Through Paris we discover that antipathy toward the Jews was not universal. His tolerant attitude is tested by relating incidents of supposed "blood libel" (the notion that Jews killed Christians in order to use their blood in Jewish rituals), but he has sympathy for their oppression and the financial extortion brought upon them by kings and others who saw Jews as a source of easy money. Through Matthew Paris we can see that the medieval attitude toward Jews was not monolithic.
I want to relate another article of the Statute, however, Article Nine. Article Nine commanded every Jew to wear a badge conspicuously. The yellow Star of David forced upon Jews in Germany during World War II is a familiar image. It turns out, however, that the "yellow badge" has a long history stretching back even before Henry III, but that's a story for tomorrow.
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