England's Original Sin: The 1290 Jewish Expulsion That Set a Toxic Precedent

In 1290 King Edward I of England (Longshanks) Offsite Link issued an edict expelling all Jews from England.


July 1290: King Edward I signed the Edict of Expulsion, giving England’s entire Jewish population three months to flee or face execution. Their crime? Existing. After centuries of being scapegoated for plagues, taxed into poverty, and accused of "blood libel," Jews were kicked out with nothing—their property stolen, synagogues seized, and futures erased. Some boarded ships to France; others drowned trying. England celebrated its first "Judenfrei" status 650 years before Hitler made the term infamous.

The expulsion wasn’t just medieval cruelty—it was a blueprint. Spain copied it in 1492, and the lie that "Jews exploit nations" still fuels antisemitism today. When London finally "invited" Jews back in 1656, it wasn’t out of guilt—Oliver Cromwell needed their banking skills.

(Source: Edward I (Longshanks) Expells the Jews from England)

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