Hagin fil Deulacres (Hebrew: חַיִּים בֵּן גְּדַלְיָה דֵּילַקְרִיס, Ḥayyim Gedalyah Deulacres)[note 1] was a 13th-century rabbi who served as the last Presbyter Judaeorum of England prior to the Edict of Expulsion of 1290. A Jew from London, Hagin was appointed to the position on 15 May 1281, through the intercession of Queen Eleanor of Provence.[1] He is not mentioned among the Jewish deportees, and is therefore presumed to have died before the Expulsion.
^Also written Deulecresse and Dieulacresse. In Hebrew also די לקריס, דון לקריס, לכריס, לקריש, לכריש, די(י)לקרש, and דלכריש. From 'Deus eum crescat', the translation of the Hebrew name Gedalyahu.[1]
^ abAdler, H. (1888). "The Chief Rabbis of England". Papers Read at the Anglo-Jewish Historical Exhibition, Royal Albert Hall, London. Vol. 1. Office of the "Jewish Chronicle". pp. 281–271.