An Answer To a Pamphlet, entitled, Considerations on the Bill to permit Persons professing the Jewish Religion to be naturalized;
Wherein the false reasoning, gross misrepresentation of facts, and perversion of scripture, are fully laid open and detected.
[London], Reprinted by the citizens of London, 1753
The Jewish Naturalisation Act of 1753 sought to remove the requirement for foreign-born individuals 'professing the Jewish Religion' (26 George 2 c.26) to receive Holy Communion, a stipulation which had hitherto prevented non-Christians from obtaining British citizenship. Despite receiving the royal assent, an anti-Semitic backlash stoked-up by propaganda misrepresenting the terms of the act led to its repeal the following year.
Second edition. 8vo, title page and several leaves with extensive conservation and repair (no loss to text), modern green cloth gilt; [8], 5-67, [1] pp.
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