Alleged Royal circumcision claim reported
🔎 Investigate this EventDate: 1948-12-20
Allegations have circulated claiming that King Charles III was circumcised in December 1948 shortly after his birth at Buckingham Palace. The accounts state the procedure allegedly took place on December 20, 1948, though no publicly released royal records confirm the claim.
The individual named in the allegations is Jacob Snowman, a London physician and mohel. Historical records confirm that Snowman practiced medicine in London during the mid-twentieth century and served patients within the Jewish community.
The claim has appeared in secondary sources and repeated commentary over time. These accounts describe Snowman as having been requested for the procedure at Buckingham Palace, although such details are not supported by contemporaneous official documentation.
Buckingham Palace has not issued public confirmation regarding the allegation. Historians and researchers generally classify the claim as unverified due to the absence of primary source material in royal archives or medical records.
The allegation continues to appear in public discussions concerning historical narratives about the British royal family. It remains part of circulating anecdotal reporting rather than established documented history.
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