
Protected status for York's medieval Jewish cemetery site
The site of a rare medieval Jewish cemetery which is to be found underneath a car park has been granted protected status.The cemetery in York, known as Jewbury, has been designated a Scheduled Monument, meaning any future development plans for the area would need to consider the archaeological significance of the site.Jewbury lies just outside York's city walls at the site of the Foss Bank car park and was thought to be one of England's first and largest medieval Jewish cemeteries.Duncan Wilson, chief executive of Historic England, said: "Medieval Jewish cemeteries are very rare, with only 10 having been positively identified in England, and none are as extensively understood as this one."
In the early 1980s, the remains of almost 500 individuals were excavated and removed from the site for study, while about 50% of its graves remained undisturbed.In 1984, the remains were reinterred in a plot on the south side of the site, in the presence of the then Chief Rabbi, Lord Jakobovitz.
Rabbi Dovid Lichtig, from the Interlink Foundation, said: "The location was unknown, the car park was presumably placed when there were no markings."According to Historic England, the cemetery "provides critical insight into York's medieval Jewish population".That was "particularly significant given the 1190 massacre at Clifford's Tower, and the expulsion of all Jews from England a century later, in 1290", a spokesperson said.The site of Jewbury was also important to British Jews, who objected to the cemetery being disturbed in the early 1980s when the land was being developed.Rabbi Lichtig said: "People do visit the cemetery. I don't think it's a go-to location, simply because it hasn't been preserved as such."I think work will have to go into changing that."The Historic England spokesperson said the importance of the site had been carefully considered in determining the scheduling boundaries.The application for scheduling Jewbury was prompted by planning discussions for a mixed-use redevelopment scheme at the site.
Listen to highlights from North Yorkshire on BBC Sounds, catch up with the latest episode of Look North.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Guardian
29 minutes ago
- The Guardian
Google battling ‘fox infestation' on roof of £1bn London office
It is intended to be an ultra-modern central London office that will serve Google for decades, but the new £1bn headquarters is beset by one of humanity's oldest-known pests: foxes. The canines have taken over the rooftop garden of the new 'landscraper' in King's Cross and had an impact on construction – although the company stressed it was 'minimal'. The infestation, first reported by the newsletter London Centric, was confirmed by sources familiar with the construction. One told the Guardian it had been a rolling three-year saga and said some foxes had begun to dig burrows in the perfectly manicured grounds. 'There's a little hole in the garden where one lives,' they said. 'We've seen her all around the building – one second she's on the fifth floor, the next she's on the garden floor. No one has been able to catch her.' Others said they have seen fox poo on the grounds of the Thomas Heatherwick-designed building. Mosh Latifi, a co-director of the London-based pest control firm EcoCare, said they could be living off rats. 'Foxes thrive quite well on rodents – we don't live more than three metres away from the nearest rat,' he said, adding that he had also witnessed foxes in building sites scouring for food left behind by workers. Leaky pipes, or even generous handouts from local businesses, could be sustaining the skulk, according to another London pest control expert, who did not wish to be named. 'London is a big playground for foxes – they will go absolutely anywhere,' they said. A Google spokesperson said: 'Fox sightings at construction sites are pretty common, and our King's Cross development is no exception. While foxes have been occasionally spotted at the site, their appearances have been brief and have had minimal impact on the ongoing construction.' According to a search using the firm's own search engine, the best way to get rid of foxes is to remove food sources, install secure fencing and fill in any gaps. It is not the first time a pricey London building has had such a problem. In 2011, a fox called Romeo was discovered living in the Shard. He survived by living off scraps left by construction workers. Romeo was captured and, after a checkup, released back on to the streets of London. Facebook had to contend with a family of foxes at its Menlo Park headquarters in San Francisco. They were eventually honoured on the social media site – being granted a set of stickers on its Messenger app. Plans for the new Google building were announced in 2013, as its first completely owned and designed company site outside the US. The 11-storey building will accommodate up to 7,000 employees. The 300-metre rooftop garden runs along the length of the building and encompasses the seventh to eleventh floors. It's believed that 40,000 tonnes of soil has been brought to support 250 trees, with a running track winding through them. The garden was designed to accommodate bees, bats, birds and butterflies. It features a space for dining, deckchairs and a fitness area. It also has an indoor pool. The nearly 1m sq ft building has been under construction since 2018, and is estimated to be completed later this year. In 2022, a topping-off ceremony which featured non-alcoholic Pimm's and luxury canapés was attended by Sadiq Khan, the mayor of London, and Keir Starmer, whose Holborn and St Pancras constituency includes the office. 'This project represents a real vote of confidence in London, in our communities and in our flourishing tech sector,' Khan said at the time.


BBC News
2 hours ago
- BBC News
Bluetongue: Royal Welsh Show bans English livestock amid outbreak
The Royal Welsh Show is to ban livestock from England from this year's event following the spread of the bluetongue a statement, organisers said they "recognised the growing concern" around the recent Welsh Agricultural Society (RWAS) said livestock entries of animals susceptible to the virus - particularly cattle, sheep and goats - will not be accepted from exhibitors located within a bluetongue virus restricted zone is to be extended to cover the whole of England from 1 July before the annual show in Llanelwedd, near Builth Wells in Powys, on 21-24 serotype 3 (BTV-3), mainly spread by midge bites, does not affect humans or risk food safety. RWAS said it was committed to working with and supporting exhibitors amid the outbreak and is working closely with the Animal and Plant Health Agency (APHA) and the Welsh government veterinary team."Our goal is to ensure that appropriate policies and procedures are in place, in line with the most up-to-date guidance," the statement read."That said, we are taking steps to provide clarity based on current guidance, while being transparent that circumstances may evolve before the Royal Welsh Show in July."This policy has been introduced to safeguard the health of livestock exhibited at this year's Royal Welsh Show and to help reduce the risk of bluetongue spreading." The RWAS said:Entries will not be accepted from exhibitors located within a bluetongue restricted who are required to travel through a restricted zone to attend the show will also not be permitted to an exhibitor enters the show but subsequently moves into a restricted zone, they will no longer be eligible to unaffected by bluetongue restrictions will remain subject to the society's general rules and RWAS said the policy could change according to any updates in government policy before the pre-movement testing exemptions apply in England, Scotland and Wales until 12 June when the Welsh government is due to announce an summer, the Royal Welsh Show celebrated 120 years since the annual agricultural show first began. What is bluetongue? Bluetongue does not affect humans and poses no risk to public health or food safetyIn rare instances, however, dogs and other carnivores can contract it if they consume infected substances such as aborted material and affects cattle, goats, sheep, goats, deer and camelids such as llamas and alpacas. The impacts on susceptible animals can vary greatly – but in most cases seen since September 2024 clinical signs have been mild and animals have is classed as a "notifiable" disease, meaning it is an offence not to report it to the of bluetongue in cattle include lethargy, crusty erosions around the nostrils and muzzle, and redness of the mouth, eyes and, sheep, signs include ulcers or sores in the mouth and nose, discharge from the eyes or nose and drooling from mouth, and the swelling of the lips, tongue, head and neck, as well as the coronary band (where the skin of the leg meets the horn of the foot).Other symptoms include red skin as a result of blood collecting beneath the surface, fever, lameness, breathing problems, abortion, foetal deformities and stillbirths. The disease can be fatal.


BBC News
3 hours ago
- BBC News
Bristol's Wills Memorial Building celebrates 100th birthday
The 100th anniversary of one of Bristol's most iconic landmarks has been Wills Memorial Building was built as a memorial to the tobacco magnate Henry Overton Wills and opened by King George V and Queen Mary on June 9 1925 in a ceremony that saw thousands lining the of the building, seen by many as the heart of the university area of the city, began in 1915 but was delayed by the First World was one of the last gothic buildings to be built in England and attracted national attention in the run-up to its grand opening. The University of Bristol marked the centenary with a special ringing of the tower's bell and commissioned a poem by Dr Lawrence Hoo that references the building's links to the transatlantic slave trade through the Wills family."If law made it legal, does that make it right, would justice have weight, if it only wore white?" it reads. "We have newspaper cuttings from across the Bristol and national press showing pictures of the king and queen and events from the day - it just shows the level of interest there was across the country," said Rachel Gardner, Senior Archivist at the University of Bristol."The stories focus on the famous people you could see at the procession but also on people like Granny Mary Jarrett, who was 104 years old and was given special permission to ride in a taxi as part of the procession, and met the king." "There's also a lot about how the citizens of Bristol were so well behaved and only a handful of wallets went missing that day so everyone should be very proud of themselves."It was specifically requested by the king that there wasn't a costly decorations scheme but the mayor wrote in the press asking everyone to decorate as freely as possible - it really involved the whole city," she added. The building narrowly avoided destruction just 15 years after its completion when incendiary bombs dropped during The Blitz caused the roof of the Great Hall to collapse - leaning burn marks on the floor that can still be seen today. Winston Churchill - who was chancellor of the university - inspected the damage the next day and insisted that a ceremony to award honorary degrees still went Great Hall has long been repaired and now welcomes hundreds of students for graduation ceremonies every has also welcomed some famous people to receive honorary degrees, including James Blunt and the former leader of the Soviet Union, Mikhail Gorbachev. The building's opening was marked by 21 chimes from Great George - the 9.5 tonne bell that sits at the top of the mark the anniversary the university organised a special manual ringing, as it would have been done in bell is the third largest that can be manually swung in the country, and when that happens it can be heard much further than its normal two-mile radius. "When we get the bell ringing there is a lot more energy involved, and the speed the clapper hits is much higher," said Matthew Tosh, bell ringer with the University of Bristol Society of Change Ringers."But getting the bell that high is really physically demanding and even with the strongest, heaviest big bell ringers we've never managed to get it more than half way up," he George is normally only rung manually for special state occasions such as royal deaths and coronations.