72. The Jews of York are Massacred, York, England 1190

Clifford’s Tower wasn’t there when the Jews of York were massacred, but it stands there now, and the mound has been planted with daffodils in remembrance and honor of the dead. The flowers have six petals, reminiscent of the Star of David, and bloom in March, near the anniversary of the atrocity.

A wave of anti-Semitism and atrocities against the Jews swept England starting in 1189, when Richard Lionheart was crowned, and mobs in London attacked the Jews in that city. The worst of the atrocities happened in York, when the local mobs burnt and pillaged Jewish homes; when the Jews retreated to the castle keep (they were, theoretically and legally, under the protection of the king), the York mob besieged the wooden keep with  stones, and murdered some of the Jews, having lured them out of the keep with the promise of safety if they converted. The Jews of York committed suicide, and burnt down the keep. Lately, work has been done to create an honorable, respectful, and informative permanent exhibit, making sure that this piece of York history is known and remembered. Michelle, having found no operas and novels featuring this atrocity, explains the history of York castle. And also Henry III’s toilet.

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