Via Ottolenghi 8, 14100 Asti Tel +39 0141 354835
Plus d'infosContenus associés au mot-clé “heritage”
Synagogue of Cherasco
Via Marconi 4, 12062 Cherasco Sezioni
Plus d'infosSynagogue of Carmagnola
Via Bellini, 9, 10022 Carmagnola Tel +39 011 813 1230 https://torinoebraica.it/turismo/
Plus d'infosSynagogue of Pisa
Via Palestro, 24, 56127 Pisa PI Tel +39 06 3996 7138 https://www.coopculture.it/it/poi/sinagoga-e-cimitero-ebraico-di-pisa/
Plus d'infosSynagogue of Siena
Vicolo delle Scotte, Siena Tel +39 0577 271345
Plus d'infosSynagogue of Pitigliano
Vicolo Manin, 58017 Pitigliano Tel +39 0564 614230
Plus d'infosTempio Maggiore of Florence
Via Luigi Carlo Farini, 6, 50121 Firenze +39 (0)55 234 6654 Jewish Tuscany | Il portale ebraico della Toscana
Plus d'infosSynagogue of Córdoba
Calle de los Judíos, 20, 14004 Córdoba +34 957 01 53 34
Plus d'infosTránsito Synagogue and Sephardic Museum
Calle de Samuel Levi, s/n, 45002 Toledo +34 925 22 36 65 http://www.culturaydeporte.gob.es/msefardi/museo.html
Plus d'infosSynagogue Beth Yaakov of Madrid
Calle Balmes, 3, 28010 Madrid +34 915 91 31 31 cjmadrid.org
Plus d'infosSynagogue of Worms
Synagogenplatz, 67547 Worms +49 6131 2108800
Plus d'infosJewish Cemetery of Worms
Willy-Brandt-Ring, 67547 Worms +062418537306
Plus d'infosJüdische Galerie Berlin
Kaiserin-Augusta-Str. 63, 12103 Berlin http://www.juedische-galerie.de/
Plus d'infosCornelis Houtmanstraat Synagogue
Cornelis Houtmanstraat 11, 2593 RD La Haye +31 (0) 70 350 7621
Plus d'infosSynagogue of Bordeaux
6 Rue du Grand Rabin Joseph Cohen, 33000 Bordeaux +33 (0) 5 56 91 79 39 https://communautejuiveaquitaine.fr/visite-de-la-grande-synagogue-de-bordeaux/
Plus d'infosSynagogue of Bayonne
35 Rue Maubec, 64100 Bayonne +33 (0) 5 59 55 03 95 ACIBB
Plus d'infosSynagogue of Carpentras
Place Maurice Charretier, 84200 Carpentras +33 (0) 4 90 63 39 97 Accueil
Plus d'infosMusée de l’œuvre Notre Dame
3, place du Château, 67000 Strasbourg Tel : +33 3 68 98 50 00 http://www.musees.strasbourg.eu/
Plus d'infosSynagogue of Strasbourg
1A, Rue René Hirschler, 67000 Strasbourg Tel : +33 3 88 14 46 50
Plus d'infosSynagogue of the Hebrew Cultural Association
46, avenue de la Libération, 14000 Caen +33 (0)2 31 43 60 54 https://aci-caen.org/
Plus d'infosNorway
Visitors walking on the street named after Norway's national poet Henrik Wergeland (1808-45) will be reminded that it was Wergeland who was behind the law that allowed Jews to immigrate to this country. Most of Norway's Jews live in Oslo (950 people), with about 100 living in Trondheim. The Norwegian community can pride itself on having given Israel a minister: the great rabbi Michael Melchior, who
Plus d'infosSweden
Sweden's Jewish community is the most important one in Scandinavia, as much in terms of the number of practicing faithful (18000-20000) as culturally. In February 2000, the Swedish capital hosted the International Conference of the Shoah, dedicated to drawing attention to the process of Jewish stolen goods and to the teaching of the genocide.
Plus d'infosFinland
The first Jews who settled in Finland were of Russian origin and were soldiers of the czar's army, called cantonists. With its independence in 1917, the country promptly granted civil rights to the Jews. In 1939, when Finland became an ally of the Third Reich against the Soviet Union, Finnish Jews found themselves in the uneasy position of serving in an army allied with the Nazis: a prayer ...
Plus d'infosUkraine
Ukraine, the largest of the former Soviet Republics, is, along with Belarus and Lithuania, heir to the former "Pale of Settlement", the buffer zone designed t contain the Jews within the westernmost margins of the Russian Empire. Despite considerable losses due to the Shoah and resulting emigration, Ukraine still contains a large Jewish community (around 500000 members, or 1% of the ...
Plus d'infosToledo
The “Sephardic Jerusalem” is known around the world for the beauty of its synagogues and its Jewish quarter. The memory of the community has remained vivid in Toledo; historians have from the thirteenth and fourteenth century onward been able to supply fairly precise information about the location and history of the city’s Jewish community. Toledo is a city of great ...
Plus d'infosEstonia
The Estonian Jewish community is the smallest of the Baltic states, and historically, the one that played the least important role in Yiddishland before the Shoah. Indeed, the community never counted more than 4500 members. Although present in Estonia since the fourteenth century, the Jews did not assume a permanent residence in Estonian territory until after 1865, when the czar abolished the ...
Plus d'infosLatvia
The Jewish community of Latvia traces its origins to the middle of the fourteenth century. Numbering today some 15000 persons, it developed in the principalities of Kurland and Livonia, territories that have often changed hands. The presence here of Baltic barons contributed to the Germanization of the country and placed the Jews themselves under this cultural influence. The gradual ...
Plus d'infosLithuania
The Jewish community of Lithuania numbers only some 6000. People It is no more than a shadow of what it once was: until the Shoah, it was a center of the Yiddish-speaking lands. In a sense, everything began here from the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries when European Judaism's center of gravity shifted from Germany and France to Poland and Belarus. As a reaction to the pietisitic practices ...
Plus d'infosSerbia
Serbia and Voivodina form, along with Montenegro, a nation that had been called The Federal Republic of Yugoslavia until 4 February 2003, when it was renamed Serbia and Montenegro. The Serbian and Voivodinan regions witnessed one of the first implementations of the Final Solution, its Jewish population as brutally martyred by German troops as were Jews in Poland or the Soviet Union. In fact, ...
Plus d'infosSlovenia
A Slavic land under Germanic rule for many centuries, Slovenia finally gained independence in 1991. The fate of the Jewish population here depended largely over the years on the good will of its princes. Nonetheless, the Jewish presence in the region goes back to antiquity. Archaeological digs have revealed a tomb engraved with a menorah at the Skocjan site, which likely dates back to the ...
Plus d'infos