- Elias of London
Elias of London or Elijah ben Moses (Heb. Eliyahu ben Moshe) was
Presbyter Judaeorum in thirteenth-centuryEngland . He succeededAaron of York , representedLondon at the so-called "Jewish Parliament " atWorcester in 1240, and in 1249 was allowed to haveAbraham fil Aaron as his assistant.Henry III of England exacted from him no less a sum than£ 10,000, besides £100 a year for a period of four years.Elias headed the deputation which asked the king's permission to leave the country in 1253. In 1255 he was imprisoned as a surety for the
tallage of the Jews, and two years later he was deposed from office, being succeeded by his brother Hagin (Hayyim). In 1259, according toMatthew Paris , he was said to have been converted, and confessed to having preparedpoison for certain of the English nobles; but in 1266 he was again treated as a Jew, and compensation to the amount of £50 was granted him for losses he had incurred during the Barons' war. He still remained one of the most important Jews of London in 1277, being one of the few who were granted permission to trade as merchants though they were not members of theGild Merchant . He appears to have been aphysician of some note, for his aid was invoked byJean d'Aresnes ,Count of Hainault , in 1280, and he obtained permission to visit the count in that year ("R. E. J." xviii. 256 et seq.).At Elias' death an inquest made upon his estate declared him to be possessed of personal property to the value of 400 marks, and of houses of the yearly rental of 100 shillings. These his widow, Fluria, was permitted to retain on payment to the king of 400 marks. One of his houses appears to have been located on
Sporier Street , near theTower of London , and at the expulsion in 1290 was granted to the prior ofChicksand .Elias was an expert in Jewish law, being summoned before the king to decide questions ("Select Pleas," etc., p. 86). A responsum of his is quoted in one of the manuscripts of the "Mordekai" (see A. Berliner, "Hebräische Poesien Meïrs aus Norwich," p. 3, London, 1887).
Resources
* [http://www.jewishencyclopedia.com/view.jsp?artid=322&letter=E Gottheil, Richard and Joseph Jacobs. "Elyas of London".] "
Jewish Encyclopedia ". Funk and Wagnalls, 1901-1906; which contains the following bibliography: :*Prynne, Short Demurrer, part ii., sub annis;:*Jacobs, in Papers of the Anglo-Jew. Hist. Exh. pp. 22, 45, 49-51;:*M. Paris, Chronica Majora, v. 398, 441, 730;:*Select Pleas of the Jewish Exchequer, ed. Rigg, pp. xxxiii., 86, 88, 130, London, 1902;:*Jacobs, in R. E. J. xviii. 259.G. J.
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