Mocatta
Mocatta (also de Mattos Mocatta, Lumbroso de Mattos Mocatta and Lumbrozo de Mattos Mocatta) is a surname.
The Mocatta family is a leading Anglo-Jewish family that traces its ancestry to the Sephardic Jewish communities of Spain and Portugal prior to the Inquisition. The family's forebears initially sought refuge in Amsterdam and Venice, before immigrating to England in the 1650s. They were among the first twelve Jewish families admitted by Cromwell.[1] In London in 1671, Moses Mocatta established the firm that became Mocatta & Goldsmid; for 300 years it was the world’s leading bullion broker. Although the family sold their stake in the company in the late twentieth century and exited the bullion business, the family continues its tradition of business and charity.[2]
The family became known for philanthropy, leadership and sponsorship of arts and letters, particularly in the United Kingdom.[3] Long involved in finance and the law, they are considered to be one of the principal families in the "cousinhood" of senior Anglo-Jewish families,[4] the de facto Anglo-Jewish aristocracy.[5]
The Mocatta firm
In 1671, Moses Mocatta established a business in London that became Mocatta & Goldsmid. This was the foundation of the modern gold and silver market.[6] The Mocatta business was the world's leading bullion broker through the 18th century, and first traded with India in 1676 and with China in the 1720s.[7] Licensed at the Royal Exchange from 1710, for more than a century, the family firm acted as exclusive bullion brokers to the Bank of England. In 1810, the Mocatta firm's managing partner appeared before Parliament's Select Committee on the High Price of Gold Bullion, when asked: 'Are there any other dealers in gold but yours', he replied, 'I apprehend none of considerable amount.'[8]
Mocatta was later involved in market stabilisations. Edgar Mocatta had a notable role in ending the Indian silver crisis of 1913.[9] In the late 20th century, the Mocatta firm was closely involved in providing liquidity and stability following the Hunt silver corner of 1980.[10] In association with NM Rothschild, in 1897 and 1919 respectively, Mocatta & Goldsmid established the price discovery mechanisms for silver and gold used into the 21st century.[11] Between 1671 and the 1970s, the Mocatta firm was headed by just seven men.[12]
Involvement in charitable and Jewish institutions
The family was involved in the establishment of Bevis Marks, the UK's oldest synagogue (1701), the Board of Deputies of British Jews (1760), and the West London Synagogue (1840). The family were active in the struggle for Jewish parliamentary emancipation.[13]
Ten members of the family have served as Chairman or President of the West London Synagogue of British Jews. Moses Mocatta served as President of the Board of Deputies, and family members have participated in communal leadership positions such as the Board of Shechita,[14] Chairman of Jews’ College,[15] and Elders of Bevis Marks. The family also participated in the Oxford and St George's Club (Bernhard Baron St George's Jewish Settlement)[16] and other such initiatives for the relief of the poor.
The family led the Jewish community's efforts for the relief of famine in Ireland in the mid-19th century.[17]
The family were leaders in the protest at the persecution of Jews in Romania and Bessarabia.[18]
In the 19th and 20th centuries, the family were leaders in the Board of Guardians and Trustees for the Relief of the Jewish Poor.[19][20]
Three members of the Mocatta family served as Honorary Life Governors of the Royal London Ophthalmic Hospital, Moorfields.[21]
David Mocatta donated funding for major parts of the building of the Royal Marsden, the first hospital in the world dedicated to the study and treatment of cancer.[22]
Frederic Mocatta was a founder of the Industrial Dwellings Society, which provided the London poor with adequate housing. Today it provides low-income key workers with low-cost housing.[23]
Eponyms
Mount Mocatta[24]
Mocatta House, a London social housing project managed by the Industrial Dwellings Society[26]
Mocatta Street[27]
Mocatta Way[28]
Mocatta Mews[29]
Mocatta Place, Queensland[30]
Mocatta Creek[32]
Dendrobium Manon Mocatta, a Singapore orchid named in 1965[33]
Mocatta Committee (Treasury Committee on Cheque Endorsement)[34]
The Mocatta President's Cup Trophy at the Brisbane Golf Club[35]
The Mocatta Library at UCL (the UK's Jewish Studies Library, a collection of 185,000 items of Jewish history)[36]
The Mocatta Haggadah, a 13th Century Castilian manuscript[37]
David Mocatta, a bus named by the City of Brighton[38]
Broker's Token, 1824–34, a coin struck with the face of NM Rothschild "The Bull" and Moses Mocatta "The Bear", the leading London financiers of the day[39]
Notable members
The family features prominently in the Anglo-Jewish "Cousinhood", the aristocracy of related, socially-prominent Jewish families that includes the Rothschilds, the Goldsmids, the Montagus, the Montefiores and the Samuels.[4] Prominent people with the surname Mocatta include:
- Isaac Mocatta, a doctor in Leghorn who in 1638 married Rachel,[40] daughter of Moses Cordovero.
- Isaac Mocatta (1765-1801), of whom Walter Savage Landor wrote, '...In the number of my acquaintance, there is none more valuable, there is not one more lively, more inquiring, more regular; there is not one more virtuous, more beneficent, more liberal, more tender in heart or more true in friendship, than my friend Mocatta – he is also a Jew.'[41]
- David Mocatta (1806–1882), a British architect, the first Jewish member of a profession in Great Britain.[42] Architect of Brighton Station.[43]
- Frederic David Mocatta (1828–1905), 'Perhaps the most popular man in the Jewish community. He holds several offices but they are no measure of the deep and extensive interest he takes in the welfare of the community as a whole. His generosity and amiability are almost proverbial; and he is personally as well known to the poor of the East End and to many of the Communities of Eastern Europe as he is in the society of Hyde Park, where he resides, or at the health resorts of the Riviera, where he passes the winter. He has travelled much, speaks almost every European language, has a smattering of Oriental tongues, and strong literary, and artistic tastes.'[44] A prominent philanthropist, bibliophile, patron of the arts, and bullion broker. Mocatta retired from his active role at Mocatta & Goldsmid in 1874 and dedicated the second part of his life to public work, particularly working for better housing for the working classes.[45] He is noted for his successful work to implement corporate governance and accountability in charities (Chairman, Charity Voting Reform Association). President, Home for Aged Jews, promoter and sponsor of poverty relief and education.[46] Mocatta served as Chairman of the 1882 Mansion House Fund on Behalf of Russian Jewry.[13] On his seventieth birthday, he was presented with a book containing signatures of the Empress Frederick and of 8,000 other representatives of 250 public bodies to which Mocatta had given his support. Author of The Jews of Spain and Portugal and The Inquisition (1877).[47] Mocatta was the patron of his nephew, the Sinologist and translator, Arthur Waley.[48] After his death, a fountain was erected in his memory, funded by public subscription, "in grateful memory." The fountain stands prominently outside Aldgate East Station.[49]
- Mary Ada Mocatta (1836–1905), wife of Frederic David Mocatta, William Holman Hunt's model for the Virgin Mary.[50] Described by Hunt's biographer as, 'Distinguished alike for her amiability and beauty.'[51]
- Dr. (Annie) Mildred Mocatta (1887–1984), a medical doctor and art collector in South Australia.[52]
- Sir Alan Abraham Mocatta, OBE QC (1907–1990), an English judge and leader of the Spanish & Portuguese Jewish Community of London, President of the Restrictive Practices Court, Chairman of the Mocatta Committee on Cheque Endorsement,[34] joint editor of Scrutton on Charter Parties (14th–17th editions)[53]
- William Hugh Mocatta (1861–1959), a Judge of the District Court of NSW.
- Rachel Mocatta, mother of Sir Moses Montefiore[54]
- Laura Mocatta, wife of Sir Elly Kadoorie, mother of Lord Kadoorie and Sir Horace Kadoorie. Lived in Hong Kong and Shanghai 1898-1918. The first woman to drive a car in China.[55]
- Edgar Mocatta (1879–1957), known as the "Silver King," he dominated the silver market during his partnership in Mocatta & Goldsmid (1900–1957).[13]
- Moses Mocatta (1768–1857), bullion broker and scholar of Hebrew language and literature.[56]
- Jacob Mocatta (1821–1877), essayist and, 'An eminent merchant... well-known for his benevolence and untiring exertions for the amelioration of the Jewish poor of the metropolis.'[57]
See also
References
- Hyamson, Albert M (1991). The Sephardim of England: a history of the Spanish and Portuguese Jewish community, 1492-1951. London: Spanish and Portuguese Jews' Congregation. OCLC 32588859.
- British Academy; Oxford University Press (2004). Oxford dictionary of national biography. ISBN 978-0-19-861412-8. OCLC 56568095.
- Royal Blue Book: Fashionable Directory and Parliamentary Guide. 1900. pp. 231, 1093.
- Bermant, Chaim (1971). The Cousinhood: The Anglo-Jewish Gentry. Eyre and Spottiswoode. ISBN 978-0-413-27330-7.
- Jewish Currents: "Descendants of Jacob Lumbrozzo de Mattos" by Tony Harding Spring 2010
- "1. Introduction". LBMA. Retrieved 6 February 2022.
- Green, Timothy; Mocatta and Goldsmid (1984). Precious heritage: three hundred years of Mocatta & Goldsmid. London: Rosendale Press. ISBN 978-0-9509182-0-4. OCLC 24763100.
- Report, together with minutes of evidence and accounts, on the high price of gold bullion : Ordered, by the House of Commons, to be printed, 8 June 1810. London: House of Commons. 1810.
- Sunderland, David (2013). Financing the Raj: The City of London and Colonial India, 1858-1940. Boydell Press. ISBN 978-1-84383-795-4.
- Silber, William L. (12 January 2021). The Story of Silver: How the White Metal Shaped America and the Modern World. Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-0-691-20869-5.
- "How London's gold and silver prices are 'fixed'". Reuters. 14 March 2013. Retrieved 6 February 2022.
- Jarecki, Henry (15 May 2021). An Alchemist's Way: How to Make Luck Look Like Skill. Falconwood Corporation. ISBN 978-0-578-87051-9.
- Rubinstein, W.; Jolles, Michael A. (27 January 2011). The Palgrave Dictionary of Anglo-Jewish History. Springer. ISBN 978-0-230-30466-6.
- England), Spanish and Portuguese Jews' Congregation (London (1865). Laws and regulations of Maʻasim tovim, Mahasim Tobim: for assisting the industrious and poor of the Spanish and Portuguese Jews' Congregation : instituted 5509-1749, revised 5625-1865. Waterlow and Sons.
- "Turmoil at Jews' College". Commentary Magazine. 1 April 1962. Retrieved 6 February 2022.
- Bernhard Baron St. George's Jewish Settlement (1964). Fiftieth anniversary review, 1914-1964. London. OCLC 4442281.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) - bloomsbury.com. "Charity and the Great Hunger in Ireland". Bloomsbury. Retrieved 6 February 2022.
- The Jews of Roumania. Report of Public Meeting Held at the Mansion House ... May 30, 1872. Printed and published for the "Roumanian Committee" by A. Meyers, Office of "Jewish Chronicle". 1872.
- Report of the Board of Guardians and Trustees for the Relief of the Jewish Poor. 1886. p. 92.
- Annual Report, Jewish Board of Guardians. London. 1918. pp. 86, 93, 101.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) - Royal London Ophthalmic Hospital: Report for the Year 1885. London: M. S. Rickerby. 1885. pp. 69, 70.
- "Our history | TRM Trust and Private Care". www.royalmarsden.nhs.uk. Retrieved 6 February 2022.
- "Mocatta House". IDS. Retrieved 6 February 2022.
- "Mount Mocatta · Rangemore QLD 4352, Australia". Mount Mocatta · Rangemore QLD 4352, Australia. Retrieved 6 February 2022.
- "Mocatta House · Trafalgar Terrace, Brighton BN1 4DU, UK". Mocatta House · Trafalgar Terrace, Brighton BN1 4DU, UK. Retrieved 6 February 2022.
- "Mocatta House - Industrial Dwellings Society EST 1885 · 80 Brady St, London E1 5DL, United Kingdom". Mocatta House - Industrial Dwellings Society EST 1885 · 80 Brady St, London E1 5DL, United Kingdom. Retrieved 6 February 2022.
- "Mocatta St · Goombungee QLD 4354, Australia". Mocatta St · Goombungee QLD 4354, Australia. Retrieved 6 February 2022.
- "Mocatta Way · Burgess Hill RH15 8UR, UK". Mocatta Way · Burgess Hill RH15 8UR, UK. Retrieved 6 February 2022.
- "Mocatta Mews · Redhill RH1 2ND, UK". Mocatta Mews · Redhill RH1 2ND, UK. Retrieved 6 February 2022.
- "Mocatta Pl · Adelaide SA 5000, Australia". Mocatta Pl · Adelaide SA 5000, Australia. Retrieved 6 February 2022.
- "Mocatta Pl · Latham ACT 2615, Australia". Mocatta Pl · Latham ACT 2615, Australia. Retrieved 6 February 2022.
- "Mocatta Creek · Queensland 4370, Australia". Mocatta Creek · Queensland 4370, Australia. Retrieved 6 February 2022.
- "The International Orchid Register / RHS Gardening". apps.rhs.org.uk. Retrieved 6 February 2022.
- Report of Mocatta Committee on Cheque Endorsement. 1956.
- "G. H. Mocatta (President's Cup)". The Brisbane Golf Club. 5 December 2021. Retrieved 6 February 2022.
- UCL (23 August 2018). "Hebrew and Jewish Collections". Library Services. Retrieved 6 February 2022.
- Haggadah, Castilian; Furlong, Gillian (2015), "Jewish service book of the 13th or 14th century, Spain", Treasures from UCL (1 ed.), UCL Press, pp. 27–30, ISBN 978-1-910634-01-1, JSTOR j.ctt1g69xrh.8, retrieved 6 February 2022
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- Mocatta, Frederic David (1877). The Jews of Spain and Portugal and the Inquisition. Longmans, Green, and Company.
- Laurence, Patricia (2 January 2013). Lily Briscoe's Chinese Eyes. Univ of South Carolina Press. ISBN 9781611171761.
- Limited, Alamy. "Frederic David Mocatta public drinking fountain (1906) set in the railings of the church of St Botolph Without Aldgate recently restored Stock Photo - Alamy". www.alamy.com. Retrieved 6 February 2022.
- Tobin, Thomas J. (1 January 2006). Worldwide Pre-Raphaelitism. State University of New York Press. p. 56. ISBN 978-0-7914-8422-7.
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