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Unit 3 · The Evolution of Antisemitism

The Blood Libel

A medieval accusation that has outlived its inventor by nearly nine hundred years.
Banner image: the false accusation against the Jews of Trent, 1475 · Nuremberg Chronicle, 1493
United States Holocaust Memorial Museum · Katz Ehrenthal Collection
The Makor Project · Unit 3: The Evolution of Antisemitism · Topic 2 of 9
Topic · The Blood LibelRecommended for · Grades 9–12 · College Survey Courses

The accusation that founded the blood libel: a murdered English boy, the 1144 text claimed, had been seized by his Jewish neighbors and “fixed to a cross in mockery of the Lord's Passion.”

Thomas of Monmouth, The Life and Passion of William of Norwich, c. 1150 (trans. Miri Rubin, Penguin Classics): quoted as the charge, never as fact

Why this Topic exists

How one false accusation links the medieval world to the modern one.

This Unit traces how antisemitism changed shape over time, from the religious teaching of the medieval Church, through the walls of the ghetto, to the forged conspiracy theories of the modern age. The blood libel sits in the middle of that story and connects its parts.

Three features make it worth studying closely. It is the bridge between the religious antisemitism of the Middle Ages and the racial, political antisemitism of the modern era, the wording shifts, but the core accusation stays the same. It is among the best-documented antisemitic myths in the historical record, from the first Norwich case through its spread across Europe, its repudiation by popes beginning in 1247, and its survival into our own time. And it is a clear case study in how a false claim, once it takes hold, can outlast even the authorities who later condemn it.

Misconceptions

What the historical record corrects.

Common misconceptions this Topic addresses

The blood libel is the foundational case of how a fabricated antisemitic accusation can persist across centuries despite repeated institutional repudiation. The dedicated Misconceptions entries document both its status as fabrication and its modern revivals.

Browse all Misconceptions →

What the accusation was

In plain terms.

The blood libel was the accusation that Jews murdered Christian children (typically said to be done around the Christian Easter period, sometimes said to be done in mimicry of the Christian theological narrative of the crucifixion) in order to use the children's blood in Jewish religious rituals, most commonly said to involve the preparation of Passover matzah. The substance of the accusation was false on every dimension. Jewish law prohibits consuming blood, a prohibition rooted in the biblical dietary code and elaborated in later halakhic law; Jewish ritual practice contains no use of blood in Passover or any other ritual; and kosher slaughter (shechita) is designed to drain blood from meat before it can be eaten.

The accusation thus fastened on the use of blood by the one tradition whose law most strictly forbids it, an irony scholars of the libel return to as one of its defining features. The standard scholarly treatments are Gavin Langmuir's Toward a Definition of Antisemitism (University of California Press, 1990) and Magda Teter's Blood Libel: On the Trail of an Antisemitic Myth (Harvard University Press, 2020); for the law itself, see a plain-language account from Conservative Judaism's The Observant Life, which quotes the biblical scholar Edward L. Greenstein calling the blood ban "the most basic eating rule in the Torah."

William of Norwich · 1144

The emergence.

The accusation took its specific form at Norwich, in eastern England, in 1144. A twelve-year-old apprentice tanner named William was found dead in Thorpe Wood, outside the town, on Holy Saturday. Local Christians accused Norwich's Jews of killing him as part of a religious rite. The sheriff, John de Caineto, gave the Jewish community refuge in Norwich Castle, which protected them from immediate violence.

The development of the William of Norwich case into the foundational blood libel narrative came not from the original 1144 events but from the hagiographical work of a monk at the Norwich Cathedral priory named Thomas of Monmouth. Thomas composed his Vita et Passio Sancti Willelmi Martyris Norwicensis ("The Life and Passion of Saint William the Martyr of Norwich") across approximately 1149–1173, beginning to write five years after the original events. Thomas's text articulated the specific accusation, in its developed form, that the Jewish community had carried out a ritual murder of William in mimicry of the Christian Passion narrative. The text became the template for subsequent blood libel narratives across the medieval period. Scholars caution, however, against treating Norwich as the sole point of origin. John M. McCulloh, writing in Speculum (1997), argues that word of William's supposed martyrdom had already reached southern Germany before Thomas completed his account, and that a separate accusation arose at Würzburg in 1147; other historians, among them Israel Yuval, trace antecedents to the anti-Jewish violence of the Rhineland in 1096 and to still earlier tales. On this view, Thomas did not invent the charge so much as give it its first fully articulated, widely copied form.

The scholarly literature on the emergence of the blood libel at Norwich is extensive. The principal references include E. M. Rose's The Murder of William of Norwich: The Origins of the Blood Libel in Medieval Europe (Oxford University Press, 2015) and the engagement in Magda Teter's Blood Libel (2020) cited above. The scholarly consensus is that the Norwich event was the starting point of the blood libel as a specific, named accusation, even though general anti-Jewish theological accusations had operated for many centuries, the specific story of ritual child murder is attested from 1144 onward as a distinct phenomenon.

The medieval pattern

A 17th-century devotional engraving presenting the false ritual-murder accusation at Regensburg, with a Latin caption naming the supposed child victims.
The accusation retold as devotion: "Six children of Regensburg," an engraving by Raphael Sadeler II for Bavaria Sancta (1615). Works like this spread the false charge through Catholic devotional culture long after the medieval period. · The Metropolitan Museum of Art, Open Access (public domain)

The spread across Christian Europe.

Across the late twelfth and thirteenth centuries, the blood libel accusation spread across Christian Europe. The cases came quickly:

  • Gloucester (1168), Bury St. Edmunds (1181), and Bristol (1183): English cases in the immediate aftermath of the Norwich narrative's dissemination. English Jewish communities bore the brunt of these years.
  • Blois (1171): the French case at Blois produced one of the most consequential medieval blood-libel-related massacres. Approximately thirty-one members of the Jewish community were burned at the stake under Christian authority following the accusation. The rabbinic literature preserves detailed records of the Blois events, including piyyutim (liturgical poems) composed by Rabbi Ephraim of Bonn and others.
  • Pontoise (1163), Saragossa (1182), Erfurt (1199), Fulda (1235): cases across the broader continental European Christian world.
  • Lincoln (1255): "Little Saint Hugh": the English case at Lincoln in 1255 became one of the most significant medieval blood libel events. A nine-year-old boy named Hugh was found dead in a well; the Lincoln Jewish community was accused of ritual murder. Approximately nineteen Jewish men were executed by Henry III; the Lincoln events were celebrated in subsequent Christian culture (Geoffrey Chaucer's Prioress's Tale, c. 1390, refers to "Little Saint Hugh" in articulating the blood libel narrative). The Lincoln Cathedral maintained a shrine to "Little Saint Hugh" through 1955, when the shrine was removed and the Cathedral installed a plaque repudiating the accusation.
  • Trent (1475): Simon of Trent: the Trent case is treated in its own section below because of its significance for the early-modern intensification of the blood libel.

The medieval pattern is traced across a large scholarly literature, including Joshua Trachtenberg's The Devil and the Jews (Yale University Press, 1943), Gavin Langmuir's Toward a Definition of Antisemitism (1990), R. Po-chia Hsia's The Myth of Ritual Murder (Yale University Press, 1988), and Miri Rubin's Gentile Tales (Yale University Press, 1999).

A related accusation · host desecration

The same logic, fitted to Christian theology.

The blood libel did not travel alone. Medieval Europe produced related accusations that ran on the same underlying logic, the fabricated charge that Jews secretly attacked Christians or what Christians held sacred, refitted to different circumstances. Seeing them beside the blood libel is the point: the family resemblance is what shows how durable the logic was, and how readily it adapted to whatever a given moment made plausible.

The host desecration accusation depended entirely on a specifically Christian belief. The Fourth Lateran Council of 1215 had formally defined the doctrine of transubstantiation, the teaching that in the Mass the consecrated host, the communion wafer, becomes the literal body of Christ. Once the wafer was understood to be Christ, a new accusation became possible: that Jews obtained consecrated hosts and stabbed, pierced, or burned them to attack Christ a second time, re-enacting the crucifixion.

The narratives followed a fixed script. A Jew was said to acquire a host by theft or bribery and to torture it; the host, miraculously, was said to bleed, cry out, or rise into the air, exposing the crime. The accused were executed, their communities often expelled, and a church or shrine was frequently raised on the site of the supposed miracle, drawing pilgrims for centuries. The best-documented cases include Paris (1290), Brussels (1370): whose alleged “Sacrament of Miracle” was commemorated in the stained glass of the city’s cathedral into the twentieth century, Passau (1478), and Sternberg (1492). The accusation generated its own visual culture: altarpieces and predella panels (Paolo Uccello’s Profanation of the Host, c. 1465–1469, is the famous example), reliquaries built to house the “surviving” hosts, and illuminated manuscripts. Miri Rubin’s Gentile Tales (Yale University Press, 1999) is the standard study.

The distinction to hold is exact. Host desecration was not the blood libel: it made no claim about children or about blood in Jewish ritual, and it depended on Catholic sacramental theology that the blood libel did not. But it operated through the identical mechanism, a fabricated accusation of a secret Jewish assault on the sacred, “proven” by miracle, punished by death, and preserved in devotion. The same logic; a different vehicle.

A related accusation · well poisoning

The same logic, fitted to a catastrophe.

Where host desecration fitted the accusation to a point of doctrine, the well-poisoning charge fitted it to a crisis. Between 1347 and 1351 the Black Death killed perhaps a third of Europe’s population. No one understood how the plague spread, and into that terror came an explanation and a target: the accusation that Jews had poisoned the wells and rivers to destroy Christendom.

The charge moved through a now-familiar machinery. “Confessions” were extracted under torture, most influentially at Chillon, in Savoy, in 1348, where the tortured testimony was copied and circulated to other towns as if it were proof. Massacres followed across the Rhineland and beyond: Strasbourg, where some two thousand Jews were burned on February 14, 1349; Basel, Mainz, Erfurt, Cologne, and dozens of smaller communities. In many towns the Jews were killed before the plague had even reached them, evidence that the accusation, not the disease, drove the violence. Samuel K. Cohn’s “The Black Death and the Burning of Jews” (Past & Present, 2007) traces the pattern.

As with the blood libel, the institutional Church condemned the charge: Pope Clement VI issued two bulls in 1348 noting that Jews were dying of the plague alongside Christians and that it spread in places where no Jews lived. And as with the blood libel, the official repudiation did not stop the local massacres, the same gap between papal policy and local practice traced in the section above. The well-poisoning accusation shows the libel’s logic running on new fuel: the same fabricated charge of a secret Jewish assault, refitted from theology to epidemic. That adaptability, the same underlying claim refitting itself to Eucharistic doctrine in one generation and mass death in the next, is precisely what let this family of accusations survive every repudiation and resurface, in new forms, for centuries.

The Church repudiations

A 1695 engraving depicting the false ritual-murder accusation, showing a child on a table surrounded by figures, blood collected in a dish.
The libel rendered as a devotional print: "Blessed Heinrich," an engraving by Jeremias Kilian, 1695, from a series titled "Ritual Murder in Bavarian Localities." Such prints presented the fabricated accusation as venerated fact and circulated it for centuries. · Leo Baeck Institute, Art & Objects Collection (78.71b)

A record across eight centuries.

The Catholic Church has, across the centuries since the blood libel's emergence, issued a series of repudiations of the accusation. The record is important because it documents that the Church's official position on the blood libel, even during the medieval period, was more critical than the behavior of local Christian populations and some local clergy. The major repudiations:

  • Pope Innocent IV · Lachrymabilem Judaeorum · May 28, 1247. The papal bull issued at Lyon, addressed to the bishops of Germany and France, that rejected the blood libel accusation. The Innocent IV bull articulated the position that the accusation was false, that Jewish religious practice did not require the use of Christian blood (citing the Jewish dietary law prohibition on blood consumption), and that the accusations were producing unjust persecution of Jewish communities. The bull was reissued by Pope Innocent IV in 1253 and by subsequent popes across the medieval period.
  • Pope Gregory X · Sicut Judaeis renewal · October 7, 1272. The papal bull issued at Orvieto, elaborating the position further. Gregory X's text articulated that "we decree that Christians need not be obeyed against Jews in this case, or to compel them to come to trial, unless our friend who attempts to vex them shall be able to prove his case publicly", sharply constraining the legal procedure under which blood libel accusations could be pursued. The Sicut Judaeis tradition was renewed by approximately fifteen subsequent popes across the medieval period.
  • Pope Martin V (1422), Pope Nicholas V (1447), Pope Sixtus IV (1475): additional medieval papal interventions, with varying degrees of force.
  • Pope Benedict XIV · 1751. The 1751 papal correspondence reaffirmed the prior Catholic position rejecting the blood libel.
  • Cardinal Lorenzo Ganganelli · 1758. The Ganganelli Report is treated in its own section below because of its significance.

The question of why these repeated repudiations did not eliminate the perpetration of blood libel accusations has itself been closely studied by scholars. Across the medieval period there was a wide gap between the papal position and the behavior of local Christian populations, local clergy, and local political authorities. The papal repudiations operated as the Catholic ceiling on the phenomenon, but were insufficient to suppress the local practice.

Simon of Trent · 1475

The early-modern intensification.

The Trent case of 1475 was consequential because it occurred at the moment when the Hebrew printing revolution (the first printed Hebrew book had appeared in February 1475 at Reggio di Calabria, recounted in the Rashi Topic) and the Christian printing revolution were producing a sharp expansion in the distribution of texts. The result: the Trent case became the first blood libel narrative to be circulated across Christian Europe through print.

In Trent (then part of the Prince-Bishopric of Trent, in the Holy Roman Empire), in late March 1475, a two-year-old Christian boy named Simon was found dead in a cellar near the Jewish quarter. The Trent Jewish community was accused of ritual murder; approximately fifteen members of the community were tortured under judicial procedure and executed in the consequence. The bishop of Trent, Johannes IV Hinderbach, promoted the cult of "Little Saint Simon" as part of the theological response to the case.

Pope Sixtus IV intervened. The papal investigation under Sixtus IV's commission (the Cardinal Battista de' Giudici investigation) concluded that the Trent proceedings had been deeply irregular and that the Trent community had been treated unjustly. The Sixtus IV bull Numquam dubitavimus (June 20, 1478) articulated the papal position that the Trent verdicts should not be cited as evidence of the broader blood libel accusation. However, and significantly, Sixtus IV's position permitted the local Trent cult of "Little Saint Simon" to continue at the local level, even as it rejected the broader validity of the case.

The consequence of the Trent case was far-reaching. The printed materials produced after the Trent events, including illustrated broadsheets, the reference in Hartmann Schedel's Nuremberg Chronicle (1493) circulating the blood libel narrative to a far broader audience than prior medieval narratives had reached, and the Latin and German-language printed materials, helped entrench the blood libel as an early-modern Christian phenomenon. The "Little Saint Simon" cult continued at the Trent local level until the Catholic Church formally suppressed it in 1965, in the immediate aftermath of Nostra Aetate.

Object Spotlight

The Trent woodcut, Nuremberg Chronicle, 1493.

A 1493 hand-colored woodcut from the Nuremberg Chronicle depicting the fabricated 1475 ritual-murder accusation at Trent. Adult figures surround a child; each adult is labeled with a name.
Michael Wolgemut and Wilhelm Pleydenwurff, woodcut from Hartmann Schedel's Nuremberg Chronicle, 1493, depicting the fabricated 1475 Trent accusation. United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, Katz Ehrenthal Collection

Start with what you actually see. A small child lies in the center of the picture. Around him stand grown men in dark robes, leaning in, their hands busy at his body. Above each man, in careful lettering, is a name, Samuel, Tobias, Mayir, Seligman. The scene is crowded, deliberate, almost calm. It is drawn the way you would draw something that really happened, by someone who wants you to believe it did.

None of it happened. This is a woodcut, a picture carved into a block of wood, inked, and pressed onto a page so it can be printed again and again. It was made in 1493 for a giant illustrated history book called the Nuremberg Chronicle, by two of the most successful print-shop artists in Germany, Michael Wolgemut and Wilhelm Pleydenwurff. The scene it shows is the city of Trent, in the Alps, in 1475, where a Christian toddler named Simon had been found dead and the town's Jews were accused of killing him for his blood. There was no evidence. Roughly fifteen Jewish men were tortured until they "confessed," and in 1476 they were burned at the stake.

Here is why this little picture matters more than it looks. For three hundred years the blood libel had spread the slow way, one preacher telling one crowd, a story carried town to town by travelers. The woodcut changed the speed. Because it was carved into a block, the same image could be printed thousands of times, identical every time, and bound into a best-selling book that reached readers across Europe. The lie no longer needed a storyteller; it could travel on its own, in print, looking like settled fact.

Look closer at one choice the artist made: the names. He did not have to letter them. By writing "Samuel," "Tobias," "Mayir" over the figures, he turned a general rumor about "the Jews" into an accusation against specific, real people, the very men the court had already killed. A reader in another country, who would never meet anyone from Trent, now "knew" their names and their supposed crime. That is what made the image so effective and so cruel at once.

And it worked. The Trent case became the first blood libel to be carried across Christian Europe in print, and the local cult of "Little Saint Simon" drew pilgrims to Trent for centuries. Popes investigated and found the charge baseless; the broader Church repudiated the libel again and again. None of it caught up with the picture. The cult was only formally shut down by the Catholic Church in 1965, nearly five hundred years later, and only after the reckoning of Nostra Aetate. The woodcut is the whole lesson of this Topic in one page: a fabrication, dressed as sober record, naming real people as its villains, reproduced at scale, and far harder to kill than the truth that disproved it.

The decrees, trial records, and printed sources behind these accusations are gathered in the Museum, under Documents and primary papers, with the major archival holdings.

The Ganganelli Report · 1758

The most thorough pre-modern Catholic investigation.

The Ganganelli Report is one of the most thorough pre-modern investigations of the blood libel phenomenon. Cardinal Lorenzo Ganganelli, who would subsequently become Pope Clement XIV in 1769, was commissioned by the Sacred Congregation of the Holy Office in 1758 to investigate a series of blood libel accusations that had occurred across Poland during the 1750s. The Polish-Jewish community had appealed to the Vatican for protection.

Ganganelli's 1758 report, preserved in the Vatican archives and published in the scholarly literature in the centuries since, set out a wide-ranging review of the historical record of blood libel accusations. Ganganelli's findings:

  • The review of past papal positions. Ganganelli examined the prior papal interventions (Innocent IV 1247, Gregory X 1272, the broader record) and confirmed that the Church's official position had been critical of the blood libel accusation across the centuries.
  • The examination of the specific Polish cases. Ganganelli reviewed the specific Polish blood libel cases of the 1750s and concluded that the evidence for the accusations was insufficient.
  • The acknowledgment of two contested cases. Ganganelli's report acknowledged two specific historical cases, Andreas of Rinn (1462) and Simon of Trent (1475): as exceptional cases where the cult had been formally permitted by the Catholic Church, while maintaining that the broader accusation was rejected. The Ganganelli position on these two cases remained controversial in the subsequent scholarly literature; the 1965 suppression of both cults, after Nostra Aetate, resolved this inconsistency.
  • The condemnation of contemporary accusations. Ganganelli's report concluded that the contemporary Polish blood libel accusations of the 1750s should be rejected and that papal intervention should be directed toward protecting the Polish Jewish community from further persecution.

The Ganganelli Report is the major Catholic pre-modern examination of the blood libel phenomenon. The report is widely cited in the post-Nostra Aetate scholarly literature as documentation that the Catholic position on blood libel, even before the twentieth-century reckoning, was critical of the popular practice. The contemporary edition is the Cecil Roth edition (The Ritual Murder Libel and the Jew: The Report by Cardinal Lorenzo Ganganelli (Pope Clement XIV), Woburn Press, 1935, with much later scholarship building on it).

Damascus Affair · 1840

The translation of the medieval accusation into the modern Western press.

The Damascus Affair of 1840 was significant because it brought the medieval blood libel accusation, for centuries confined mostly to local Christian European contexts, into the Western press and the consular-diplomatic record of the modern period. In February 1840, a Capuchin friar named Father Thomas and his Muslim servant disappeared in Damascus. The French consul in Damascus, Ulysse de Ratti-Menton, promoted the accusation that the Damascus Jewish community had ritually murdered Father Thomas. Several leading members of the Damascus Jewish community were tortured; one died under torture, and a forced confession was extracted from another.

The case drew international attention. Sir Moses Montefiore of the United Kingdom, Adolphe Crémieux of France, and Salomon Munk led a Jewish diplomatic mission to the Ottoman Sultan Abdulmejid I and to Muhammad Ali of Egypt (then the ruler of Damascus). The intervention produced an Ottoman firman of November 6, 1840 that repudiated the blood libel accusation in formal Ottoman state terms, articulating the position that "religious and worldly considerations" required the protection of the Jewish community against accusations "not even worth investigating."

The Damascus Affair was consequential beyond its immediate resolution. The Western press coverage, the first time the blood libel accusation had been widely covered in the liberal and conservative European press alike, exposed the accusation to the broader Western public. The response was sharply divided: much of Western public opinion rejected the accusation; other parts of Western public opinion retained the medieval framework. The result was sustained Jewish attention to the question of how to respond to the persistence of the medieval accusation in the modern period, which shaped the development of the broader modern Jewish defense and civic-organization architecture.

The reference scholarly work on the Damascus Affair is Jonathan Frankel's The Damascus Affair: "Ritual Murder," Politics, and the Jews in 1840 (Cambridge University Press, 1997).

The Beilis Trial · 1911–1913

The modern blood libel case.

The Beilis Trial in Kiev across 1911–1913 was the most consequential modern blood libel case before the contemporary period. In March 1911, a thirteen-year-old Christian boy named Andrei Yushchinsky was found murdered in a cave near a brick factory in Kiev, in the Russian Empire. The Russian state, under the Black Hundreds-aligned political pressure and the anti-Jewish climate of the late Russian Imperial period, accused Menahem Mendel Beilis, a thirty-seven-year-old Jewish clerk at the brick factory, of having committed a ritual murder of Yushchinsky for the Jewish religious purposes traditionally attributed in the medieval blood libel narrative.

The Beilis Trial across 1913 was a major international event. The Russian Imperial state poured resources into the prosecution; the Jewish defense mobilized international support including from Western European and American Jewish figures, from liberal Russian figures, and from much of the international press. The Russian state produced "expert" testimony from a Catholic priest, Justinas Pranaitis, who testified that the Jewish religious tradition required the ritual use of Christian blood, testimony that the defense dismantled under cross-examination.

The verdict of October 28, 1913 acquitted Mendel Beilis. The Russian Imperial jury, made up mostly of conservative non-Jewish Russian peasants and townspeople, acquitted Beilis of the specific charge of having killed Yushchinsky. The verdict was split: the jury simultaneously voted that "a ritual murder had occurred" while acquitting the specific defendant. The consequence was a sweeping international vindication of the Jewish defense's case, even as the partial verdict preserved the possibility of the broader accusation framework.

The Beilis Trial is the subject of a large historical literature. Key references include Robert Weinberg's Blood Libel in Late Imperial Russia: The Ritual Murder Trial of Mendel Beilis (Indiana University Press, 2014) and Edmund Levin's A Child of Christian Blood: Murder and Conspiracy in Tsarist Russia: The Beilis Blood Libel (Schocken, 2014). Mendel Beilis subsequently emigrated to the United States; his memoir The Story of My Sufferings was published posthumously in 1925.

The twentieth century

The persistence into the modern period.

The blood libel accusation persisted into the twentieth century across multiple contexts. The major cases:

  • Massena, New York · 1928. An American blood libel case. A four-year-old child went missing in the upstate New York town of Massena on September 22, 1928, on the eve of Yom Kippur. The local Christian community accused the Massena Jewish community of having abducted the child for ritual purposes. The New York state police questioned the local rabbi about Jewish religious practices. The child was found the following day, unharmed, having become lost in the woods. The consequence drew strong response from the American Jewish community over the question of how the medieval blood libel accusation had appeared in twentieth-century America, and produced responses including formal apologies from the Massena civic leadership and a public response from the American Jewish Committee.
  • Kielce, Poland · July 4, 1946. The post-Holocaust Kielce pogrom was precipitated by a blood libel accusation. A nine-year-old Christian boy named Henryk Błaszczyk had been missing for two days and returned home claiming the Kielce Jewish community had abducted him for ritual purposes. The result was a deadly Polish pogrom: approximately 42 Jewish survivors of the Holocaust who had returned to Kielce were killed in the violence; approximately 40 additional Jewish residents were wounded. The Kielce pogrom was significant as documentation that the blood libel framework had survived the Holocaust even within the Polish national context where most of pre-war European Jewish life had been destroyed.
  • Throughout the twentieth century: further cases across Eastern Europe, the Middle East, Latin America, and elsewhere, treated in the broader scholarship cited above.

Nostra Aetate and beyond

The postwar Catholic reckoning.

The postwar Catholic reckoning with the blood libel inheritance was far-reaching. The major moments:

  • The 1955 removal of the "Little Saint Hugh" shrine at Lincoln Cathedral. Described above. The Lincoln Cathedral plaque installed in 1959 reads: "Trumped up stories of 'ritual murders' of Christian boys by Jewish communities were common throughout Europe during the Middle Ages and even much later. These fictions cost many innocent Jews their lives. Lincoln had its own legend and the alleged victim was buried in the Cathedral in the year 1255. Such stories do not redound to the credit of Christendom, and so we pray: 'Lord, forgive what we have been, amend what we are, and direct what we shall be.'"
  • Nostra Aetate · October 28, 1965. Treated in the Nostra Aetate Topic. The Catholic Church's repudiation of the deicide accusation and the broader Adversus Judaeos framework reached the theological foundation of the blood libel accusation.
  • The 1965 suppression of the "Little Saint Simon" cult at Trent. In the immediate aftermath of Nostra Aetate, the Catholic Church formally suppressed the Trent cult that had operated since 1475. The Bishop of Trent, Alessandro Maria Gottardi, declared the cult invalid and removed the Simon shrine.
  • The 1985 Vatican Notes. The document Notes on the Correct Way to Present the Jews and Judaism in Preaching and Catechesis in the Roman Catholic Church elaborated the post-Nostra Aetate Catholic position on the broader anti-Jewish inheritance.
  • The 1998 We Remember: A Reflection on the Shoah. The Vatican document addressing the Catholic Church's engagement with the Holocaust period, discussed in the Nostra Aetate Topic.
  • The 2015 The Gifts and the Calling of God Are Irrevocable. The Vatican document elaborating the contemporary Catholic position on the broader Catholic-Jewish relationship.

The contemporary persistence

The record into the present.

The blood libel accusation has not disappeared from the contemporary record. That record includes:

  • The Anti-Defamation League (ADL) annual surveys: the documentation of blood libel-derived antisemitic content in contemporary media, social media, and political discourse across multiple geographic regions.
  • The contemporary scholarly engagement: Magda Teter's Blood Libel: On the Trail of an Antisemitic Myth (Harvard University Press, 2020), winner of the National Jewish Book Award in History, is the contemporary scholarly synthesis. Teter's study traces the persistence of the blood libel accusation across the centuries, including its reappearance in contemporary forms, and the question of why such accusations have proven so resistant to repudiation.
  • The contemporary political-discourse record: blood libel-derived political rhetoric across multiple regional contexts, tracked by ADL, by the European Union Agency for Fundamental Rights, and by the academic literature on contemporary antisemitism. The connection between the medieval accusation and contemporary conspiratorial political frameworks, including the QAnon family of conspiracy theories that appropriated blood-libel-derived narrative structures, is traced in that literature.
  • The Holocaust education response: the inclusion of blood libel material in the Holocaust education programs of USHMM, Yad Vashem, Facing History and Ourselves, and the broader Holocaust education infrastructure as part of the documentation of the long evolution of antisemitism that produced the Holocaust era.

The reality is that the blood libel, despite eight centuries of Catholic Church repudiation, despite the Damascus Affair's Western press exposure, despite the Beilis verdict, despite the Nostra Aetate framework, despite the postwar reckoning, has persisted as a recognizable accusation in contemporary form. The persistence is one of the central questions in the contemporary scholarly literature on antisemitism.

Key takeaways

  • The blood libel is a false accusation that Jews murdered Christian children for ritual purposes, it began at Norwich, England, in 1144.
  • It had no basis in fact and was repudiated by medieval popes, yet it spread across Europe for centuries.
  • The same accusation resurfaced in the modern era, Damascus (1840), the Beilis trial in Russia, and even in the United States at Massena, New York (1928).
  • It endures as a case study in how a fabricated claim can survive repeated debunking across centuries and continents.

Discussion questions

Working from the evidence.

Grounded in the sourced record above. Each asks students to read the sources rather than restate a conclusion.

  1. The 1144 Norwich text was written by a monk who arrived in the town years after the boy's death. What does it tell us that the earliest, most detailed version of the accusation comes from someone who was not there?
  2. The Trent woodcut letters a name above each accused figure. How does naming specific people change the way an accusation is received, compared with a general rumor?
  3. Cardinal Ganganelli's 1758 Vatican inquiry concluded there was “no evidence whatsoever” for the charge, yet the report stayed in the archives for over a century. What does the gap between a finding and its publication reveal about how the libel persisted?
  4. The accusation centered on the ritual use of blood, while Jewish dietary law contains some of the most extensive prohibitions on consuming blood of any religious tradition. Why might an accusation take the exact shape of what its target most strictly forbids?
  5. The same false accusation reappears at Norwich (1144), Trent (1475), Damascus (1840), Kiev (1911), and into the present. What makes a claim durable enough to cross eight centuries and many cultures, even after being repeatedly disproven?

Classroom Connections

Where this Topic fits.

Teaching Connections

The disciplines and courses this Topic naturally supports, for any educator, anywhere.

  • Medieval European History: the blood libel as a documented medieval phenomenon, and how the Adversus Judaeos theological tradition translated into one specific accusation.
  • Early-Modern History: Trent (1475) at the moment of the print revolution, which carried the medieval inheritance into the early-modern world.
  • Modern European & Russian History: the Damascus Affair (1840) and the Beilis Trial (1911–1913) as modern recurrences of the medieval charge.
  • Historical Thinking & Source Analysis: the blood-libel record (medieval sources, trial transcripts, modern scholarship) as primary-source material; and keeping the accusation, official institutional responses, and local actions distinct.
  • Pairs with Adversus Judaeos and the Protocols: the theological tradition, the medieval-to-modern phenomenon, and the modern conspiratorial framework.

Standards Alignment

  • NYS Global History & Geography: 9.7 (the medieval world: the blood libel as a documented medieval European phenomenon).
  • Common Core ELA-Literacy: RH.11–12.6 and RH.11–12.9 (source perspective and the integration of multiple complex sources).

Further Teaching Resources

Sources and citations

  • Teter, Magda. Blood Libel: On the Trail of an Antisemitic Myth. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2020. (The standard contemporary scholarly synthesis; National Jewish Book Award for History.)
  • Rose, E. M. The Murder of William of Norwich: The Origins of the Blood Libel in Medieval Europe. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2015.
  • McCulloh, John M. "Jewish Ritual Murder: William of Norwich, Thomas of Monmouth, and the Early Dissemination of the Myth." Speculum, vol. 72, no. 3 (July 1997), pp. 698–740. University of Chicago Press / Medieval Academy of America.
  • Langmuir, Gavin I. Toward a Definition of Antisemitism. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1990.
  • Langmuir, Gavin I. History, Religion, and Antisemitism. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1990.
  • Drazen, Paul S. "Why Kosher Food Shouldn't Have Visible Blood" (adapted from The Observant Life: The Wisdom of Conservative Judaism for Contemporary Jews). Exploring Judaism / The Rabbinical Assembly. (On the biblical and halakhic prohibition against consuming blood; quotes the biblical scholar Edward L. Greenstein.) exploringjudaism.org
  • Hsia, R. Po-chia. The Myth of Ritual Murder: Jews and Magic in Reformation Germany. New Haven: Yale University Press, 1988.
  • Hsia, R. Po-chia. Trent 1475: Stories of a Ritual Murder Trial. New Haven: Yale University Press, 1992.
  • Tartakoff, Paola. Conversion, Circumcision, and Ritual Murder in Medieval Europe. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 2020.
  • Rubin, Miri. Gentile Tales: The Narrative Assault on Late Medieval Jews. New Haven: Yale University Press, 1999.
  • Trachtenberg, Joshua. The Devil and the Jews: The Medieval Conception of the Jew and Its Relation to Modern Antisemitism. New Haven: Yale University Press, 1943.
  • Frankel, Jonathan. The Damascus Affair: "Ritual Murder," Politics, and the Jews in 1840. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1997.
  • Weinberg, Robert. Blood Libel in Late Imperial Russia: The Ritual Murder Trial of Mendel Beilis. Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 2014.
  • Levin, Edmund. A Child of Christian Blood: Murder and Conspiracy in Tsarist Russia: The Beilis Blood Libel. New York: Schocken, 2014.
  • Roth, Cecil, ed. The Ritual Murder Libel and the Jew: The Report by Cardinal Lorenzo Ganganelli (Pope Clement XIV). London: Woburn Press, 1935.
  • Dundes, Alan, ed. The Blood Libel Legend: A Casebook in Anti-Semitic Folklore. Madison: University of Wisconsin Press, 1991.
  • Friedman, Saul S. The Incident at Massena: The Blood Libel in America. New York: Stein and Day, 1978.
  • Gross, Jan T. Fear: Anti-Semitism in Poland after Auschwitz. New York: Random House, 2006. (On the Kielce pogrom and the postwar Polish antisemitism context.)
  • Pope Innocent IV. Lachrymabilem Judaeorum. May 28, 1247. Critical edition in Bullarium Romanum.
  • Pope Gregory X. Sicut Judaeis renewal. October 7, 1272. Critical edition in Bullarium Romanum.
  • Thomas of Monmouth. The Life and Passion of Saint William the Martyr of Norwich. c. 1149–1173. Critical edition: M. R. James and Augustus Jessopp, eds., Cambridge University Press, 1896. New edition: Miri Rubin, trans., Penguin Classics, 2014.
  • Beilis, Mendel. The Story of My Sufferings. New York: Mendel Beilis Publishing Co., 1926. (Posthumous memoir of the Beilis Trial defendant.)
  • Cohn, Samuel K., Jr. “The Black Death and the Burning of Jews.” Past & Present 196 (2007): 3–36.
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Continue to Unit 3 · Topic 03
The Ghetto System →

The early-modern European ghetto (born in Venice in 1516, dismantled three centuries later) its origin, its daily life, what it produced, and how it differs from the Nazi-era ghettos that took its name.

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Last updated: June 2026.

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