§ 1. No Jew, without exception, is permitted to settle, to carry on commerce, trade, or any handicraft, in the canton (Basleland).
§ 2. Any citizen who admits a Jew into his house, be it for commercial purposes, as clerk or servant, or in any other capacity, or for .what other purposes soever[sic.], is liable to a fine of 300 francs.
§ 3. Hawking goods or with patterns, dealing in cattle, products, leather, etc., is prohibited to any Jew under a fine of from 5 to 20 francs for the first offence, and of confiscation of goods and the same fine for the second offence.
§ 4. Whoever lets a ware-room, stall or-house to any Jew, during a fair, for a period exceeding six days, is liable to a fine of 50 francs for the first contravention and of 200 francs for the second.
This law, promulgated on the 17th of November, 1851, and for which we should rather have looked to the annals of the fourteenth century, was subsequently suspended for a few months, since the government of the Prince President had forwarded a note to the Council of the Confederation to the following effect:—
That France will expel all Swiss citizens established in France, in case the two cantons (Basle, City and Campagne) should insist on carrying out this law against the Jews.
But while negotiations were pending between France and the central government of Switzerland, the two cantons carried out the law of expulsion, and no further steps have since been taken by the French government. Every attempt on the part of the Jews themselves, as well as the intercession of the Consistory of the Upper Rhine (to which department the Jews expelled from Switzerland mostly belong), and of the Central Consistory of Paris, for the repeal of this obnoxious law, proved futile and unsuccessful.