Ownership and Control of Synagogues
Ownership of the synagogue building was generally understood to be held by the community. However, the rabbis (not to mention non-Jewish authorities) exerted control over the synagogue’s establishment, in addition to ruling on other aspects of its ownership, sale, and usage. The synagogue was used for a variety of communal purposes (see Communal Activities at the Synagogue), but the rabbis were protective and placed restrictions on the synagogue space as a place of prayer, ritual, and holiness. These rabbinic discussions and rulings also indicate that the notion of communal ownership carried some complexity; references to synagogues for certain professions likely indicate that professional groups sometimes played an important financial role in a synagogue’s foundation. In other cases, ownership seems to belong to the Jewish community at large rather than the local one.