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The Scuola Grande Tedesca is the oldest of five synagogues in the Venetian ghetto and was built in 1528 by the local Ashkenazic community. Although only its five windows are visible from the street…
Places:
Venice, Republic of Venice (Venice, Italy)
Date:
1528 and 1672
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Founded in 1548, the Italian Synagogue of Padua was moved to its current location by 1603. It was renovated in the nineteenth century and restored again after World War II, when the Scuola Grande…
Places:
Padua, Republic of Venice (Padua, Italy)
Date:
1548
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There were once hundreds of wooden synagogues in Poland and Lithuania, but only a very few examples of this particularly Jewish form of architecture have survived. The Zabłudów synagogue, built around…
Places:
Zabludow, Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth (Zabłudów, Poland)
Date:
ca. 1637
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Joseph Avis, a Quaker carpenter, was commissioned to build the first synagogue in England following the readmission of Jews in 1656: the synagogue of London’s Spanish and Portuguese community, on…
Places:
London, Kingdom of Great Britain (London, United Kingdom)
Date:
1699–1701
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Hecker’s design for the Museum of the History of the Polish Jews (Polin) proposed a complex of two buildings: one a rectangular concrete block and the other a lighter metal and glass structure. The…
Contributor:
Zvi Hecker
Places:
Warsaw, Poland
Date:
2005
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Max Liebermann frequently traveled to Amsterdam. He was attracted to the city because of its connection to Rembrandt, whom he idolized. But he came back again and again, drawn to Amsterdam’s Jewish…
Contributor:
Max Liebermann
Places:
Berlin, German Empire (Berlin, Germany)
Date:
1908
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Public Access
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This eighteenth-century map of Venice includes the ghetto within which the city’s Jews were required to live from 1516 until Napoleon’s conquest of the Republic of Venice in 1797. The Venice ghetto…
Places:
Venice, Republic of Venice (Venice, Italy)
Date:
ca. 1729
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Public Access
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The Pinkas Synagogue is the second-oldest extant synagogue in Prague. It is believed that a synagogue was found in that location as early as 1492. The structure now housing the synagogue was built by…
Places:
Prague, Holy Roman Empire (Prague, Czech Republic)
Date:
1625
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Public Access
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Mordechai Meisel (1528–1601) was a court Jew, merchant, philanthropist and builder in Prague. Meisel became a member of the Prague Jewish Communal Council in 1576 and later served as its head. This is…
Places:
Prague, Holy Roman Empire (Prague, Czech Republic)
Date:
1601
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The Isaac (or Izaak) Synagogue in Kraków was built in 1638–1644. Named after its donor, Izaak Jakubowicz (d. 1673), also known as Isaac the Rich, the synagogue was destroyed by the Nazis during World…
Contributor:
Artist Unknown
Places:
Kraków, Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth (Kraków, Poland)
Date:
1638–1645