Chief Rabbis
The provincial communities generally affiliated themselves with the Great Synagogue in London and the Rabbi of The Great was acknowledged as their spiritual head. Initially the Rabbi of the Great was not acknowledged as such by the members of the Hambro, but when Hart Lyon became Rabbi of the Great in 1758 it was agreed that henceforward the Rabbi of the Great would be recognised by all Ashkenazi communities as the Chief Rabbi of Jews throughout Britain, and in due course the Empire as well.
|
1696-1700 |
Judah Loeb Cohen |
| 1700-1704 |
Aaron the Scribe of Dublin |
| 1704-1756 |
Aaron Hart |
| 1758-1764 |
Hart Lyon |
| 1765-1792 |
David Tevele Schiff |
| 1802-1842 |
Solomon Hirschell |
| 1845-1890 |
Nathan Marcus Adler |
| 1891-1911 |
Hermann Adler |
| 1913-1946 |
Joseph Herman Hertz |
| 1948-1965 |
Israel Brodie (He was knighted in 1969) |
| 1967-1991 |
Immanuel Jacobovits (He was made a life peer in 1988) |
| 1991- |
Jonathan Sacks (He was knighted in 2005) |
Hahamim
| 1664-1665 |
Jacob Sasportas |
| 1670-1679 |
Joshua da Silva |
| 1681-1684 |
Jacob Abendana |
| 1689-1700 |
Solomon Ayllon |
| 1701-1728 |
David Nieto |
| 1732-1740 |
Isaac Nieto |
| 1744-1751 |
Moses Gomez de Mesquita |
| 1761-1784 |
Moses Cohen d'Azevedo |
| 1806-1828 |
Raphael Meldola |
| 1866-1879 |
Benjamin Artom |
| 1887-1918 |
Moses Gaster |
| 1949-1995 |
Solomon Gaon |