32 Hoverniersstraat, 2018 Antwerp
Plus d'infosContenus associés au mot-clé “heritage”
Makhzikei HaDas Synagogue
22 Jacob Jacobstraat, 2018 Antwerp
Plus d'infosRomi Goldmuntz Synagogue
2 Van Den Nestlei, 2018 Antwerp +32 3 232 01 87
Plus d'infosBelfast Hebrew Congregation
49 Somerton Rd, Belfast BT15 3LH +44 (0) 28 9077 5013 https://www.belfastjewishcommunity.org.uk/
Plus d'infosPrinces Road Synagogue
Synagogue Chambers, Princes Ave, Liverpool L8 1TG +44 (0) 151 709 3431 http://www.princesroad.org/
Plus d'infosOxford Jewish Synagogue
21 Richmond Rd, Oxford OX1 2JL +44 (0) 1865 514356 http://www.ojc-online.org/
Plus d'infosMikvah of Montpellier
1 Rue de la Barralerie, 34000 Montpellier, France
Plus d'infosGrand Synagogue of Marseille
117 Rue Breteuil, 13006 Marseille +33 (0) 4 91 81 13 57 http://consistoiredemarseille.com/
Plus d'infosSynagogue of Cavaillon
Rue Hébraïque, 84300 Cavaillon +33 (0) 4 90 72 26 86 http://www.cavaillon.org
Plus d'infosSynagogue of Avignon
2, place Jérusalem, 84000 Avignon Tel : +33 4 90 85 21 24
Plus d'infosGrand Synagogue of Lyon
13, Quai Tilsitt, 69002 Lyon +33 (0) 4 78 37 13 43 http://consistoiredelyon.fr/
Plus d'infosOld Synagogue of Obernai
9, Rue de Sélestat, 67210 Obernai
Plus d'infosFrench Hebrew bookstore of Strasbourg
Librairie du Cédrat 15, Rue de Bitche, 67000 Strasbourg +33 (0)3 88 37 32 37
Plus d'infosMikvah of Strasbourg
20, rue des Charpentiers, 67000 Strasbourg +33 (0)3 88 52 28 28
Plus d'infosOld Synagogue of Marmoutier
11, rue du Plan, 67440 Marmoutier
Plus d'infosOld Synagogue of Pfaffenhoffen
Passage du Schneeberg, 67350 Pfaffenhoffen +33 (0)3 88 07 80 05 (Musée de l’Image populaire)
Plus d'infosSynagogue of Saint-Louis
5, rue de la Synagogue, 68300 Saint-Louis +33 (0)3 89 69 84 50
Plus d'infosSynagogue and Museum of Hochfelden
12, place du Général Koenig, 67270 Hochfelden +33 (0)3 88 89 04 52
Plus d'infosOld Synagogue of Rouffach
8, rue Ullin, 68250 Rouffach
Plus d'infosCopenhagen
The Jewish community of Copenhagen has been active since the end of the 17th century. Today, most of Denmark’s 7000 Jews live in Copenhagen. Abraham Salomon of Rausnitz was its first rabbi, appointed in 1687. Six years later, a Jewish cemetery was established in Mollegade. Destroyed by a fire in 1795, no synagogue was active until a liberal one was built in 1833 in Krystalgade. Years ...
Plus d'infosDenmark
On the approximately 8000 Jews living in the country of Denmark, the great majority of them as Ashkenazim who make Copenhagen their home. In 1968, 2500 Polish Jews fled the anti-Semitic purges led by the Communist government there and settled in the capital and in Arhus.
Plus d'infosScandinavia
Scandinavia has not always been divided along its current national borders. When King Christian IV (1588-1648) opened Denmark to the Jews, the country included not only southern Sweden and several cities in northern Germany (Schleswig-Holstein), where the majority of Danish Jews lived, but also a part of the Virgin Islands in the Antilles, where Danish Jews had a central role. In contrast, ...
Plus d'infosRussia
Until the early twentieth century, the history of Russia's Jews unfolded primarily in territories that no longer belong to the present-day Russian federation (Ukraine, Belarus, Bessarabia, and Lithuania). With a few rare exceptions, Jews were forbidden to settle in Moscow, Saint Petersburg, and the city of Central Russia. Of course, Jewish colonies have existed since antiquity on the shores ...
Plus d'infosBordeaux
For three centuries, the cellars of tumbledown houses in the old town were home to a hidden Jewish community, that of the conversos who came here from Spain after 1474. Used to hiding their faith in Spain, these “new Christians” continued to practice their old religion in secret when they came to France. Bordeaux’s Jewish community began to emerge from the shadows only in ...
Plus d'infosBelarus
The Republic of Belarus is a state formed of the disintegration of the Soviet Union. It has retained, however, close ties to Moscow. Historically, Belarus belonged to Lithuania in the fourteenth century, Poland in the fifteenth, and later the Russian Empire in the late eighteenth century. From 1920 to 1939, its western regions (including Grodno and Brest-Litovsk) were integrated within ...
Plus d'infosBosnia-Herzegovina
In Sarajevo, where most of Bosnia's Jews lived, the earliest refugees from the Iberian Peninsula began arriving around 1565, having first stopped in Italy, Greece, Bulgaria, and other regions under the Turkish domination. Belonging to the rayah (the term used by the Turks to designate non-Muslim populations under their control), as such they had a status equivalent to that of other ...
Plus d'infosGreece
Below the Acropolis is Athens, a marble plaque engraved with a menorah has been uncovered amid the clutter of the Agora, near a statue of Emperor Hadrien. Perhaps it used to rest on one of the ancient synagogues visited by Saint Paul, who had as little success with the Athenian Jews as the Greek philosophers had with the Areopagus.
Plus d'infosTurkey
In the beautiful synagogue of Ahrida, one of the oldest in Istanbul, the tevah assumes the shape of a caravel symbolizing not only Noah's Ark but also the vessels that in 1492 transported the Jews banished from Spain to the shores of the Ottoman Empire. A royal edict issued in Granada, only recently recaptured from the Arabs, gave the Jews no choice but conversion to Catholicism or exile. ...
Plus d'infosBulgaria
In a medieval miniature, Bulgarian Czarina Sara figures beside her husband, Czar Alexander, a two children, Shishman and Tamara. A Jewish queen, Sara of Turvono was obliged to convert to Christianity, adopting the name Theodora. In the fourteenth century such a union shock no one in Constantinople, though it would have been inconceivable to the leaders of Rome.
Plus d'infosRomania
There is little evidence of a Jewish presence on the coats of the Black Sea before the arrival of Roman legions in the early second century C.E. Vestiges, coins, and inscriptions preserved in a museum in Bucharest, however, attest to the existence of Jews in the region throughout the first millennium. Near the end of the thirteenth century, the great voyager Benjamin de Tudela had already ...
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